Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 30, 1888, Page 13

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SUNDAY DECEMBER 30, 1888 -SI on his faithtul follower's lap, eame ont | dead become be ful birds £ g O E At el oy o ' 1the | regard sma sod-hiras, thinking they = SRR R s R Store No NING, KING & COM Store Ko Strange Beliefs of Anclent and | with his sword n it passes ove the Aht tis believed that the Heathen Nations . “ par 1 aflter oath r 9 : rotu Largest Manuhcturers and Refailers of Fine Clothing 1 THE PLURALITY OF THE SOUL. | low i u cro « Aocoriing o pRLLIALL, World | red mintain 1 souls of turn i do " - | \ 1 ( " 1 Il g t ey 1 Iro Position of Mice and Birds in the S, i \ A 1 1 W d o« v ocou « . Folk Lore of the Soul-The vonderfu i R T Barie e fhined A Milky-Way a Monse W ' R ass | tOUeT. (10 Bivey #f e iy S f (hlant Duhesme of ;A re 1 R A C n D N |3 { tine \ \ L] | t } wd 1an 0 appes »o th m . Decon 0 ( mns h 1 h « 1 bied in his H 1 H v 4R nt of | Rl S A it | TRH0, B AL — We are overstocked with the following lots, and will close them out at ( y . ill, n 0d | of the dy d en s < less than manufacturer’s Prices: n 1 he cc of n plura 1 ded by a i . ReiTh 5L FUIVR [ mecto.” _ | rhe providin vitl Lot Former Price $15; now $ro. eel I'ro y ; i \ 15t he ( e | por mone o ) k] 1 ) s v m i th 0 ol forms, A ; ! wr dogend y ; Lot 3970 ‘ 15; now $10, : dron ttending ‘ e i Lot 3971 15; now $ro. 1 , nitod nffoctions, o : Lot 3554 = 15, now $10 St ’ avoid « i o i rule : S s Sunton Lot 5190 15, now $10 cou an 1 an instar disappears ove « Ade niver nong the Romans, the pas- “ , fo livis winos. of tila dnily | The’Pwifehor " th alntm isjes. g | siies of Juvonnt, val. ik pags, 07, aod | Cuad) Lot 5195 20, now $14 i B O VEGRBEAITA s e oo St e (11, 7 g o Suinciont” proot” | () Lot 4421 20, now $14 P £ R A R TAS TR mnd enters the sl s mouth. | Among the Chinese,money was put into " joys and fatigues of tt ) Then he opens his oyes and relides o | the mouth of the dend to buy favor in Lot 4573 18, now $12 l ¥ ' in his suvago warfare, and onconnters | wonderful “drenm: o GRBBHI | LHC we to heaven. In Wa on Lot m J $ adventures atonce weird and abnorma broad river on a bridge of silver, and | territory, in 1t the mouth of a dead (o) § The dead—th ho have for years | found on the further shoee heaps of | Twana sghaw was filled with meney be- m 3091 ’ 157 now I0 been moldering on the earth—eome | £old and jewels. Itis move frequently | fore buvial. At the present day all T $ E i i, and renew onte | e sise 0f & monse. UL the Wander | over Europs at Trish wakos mongy 3 Lot 8181 15, now $10 e A Kk and speilk ! ing soul delights to masquerade in, | placedin the hand of the dead. In us llmw r‘l“‘\ “\. wsures of :“‘ ‘:’"‘"‘_ though, necording to Grimm, it is the | keim, the soul of tho dead, hi LOt 4941 . 18v now 10 % 4 1 il s body immovable, life and | devil's brides out of whose mouths the | crossed the bridge leading out of h ¢ R warmth rvemain with it, his breath runs in the shape of a ved mouse, | With the uid of the pric roceives Lot 3200 2 12, now $8 comes and goes, his p throbs in his [ Thus we are told that in Thuringin a | lctter of recommendation” from them ¢ > ~ g 7 i o, e e | VNG 01 el whilo o Sora: | fvoring 11 amitne: (hto the west Lot 3203 i 10, now $6 b e T gtion und longuos of | Puntions wore shelline nuts, when tiiey | ern hewven. The ded of ancicnt Mexi- , U8 voisan ikgiog o tatis ? "o i T ercp on, | e wore firnished with soveral pues MARK YUU' These goods are all new and fresh from our own factory. : | 3 ossed prowd ¢ yed an ym her parted Llips and run out of the | ports, the first one cnabling the soul te 3 cnemy”or Killed sowo stvags wild | i AR B A S NOW IS YOUR TIME TO BUY A GOOD . eust. - Upon the supposition of o dual | ook the sleeper. but. 1ot suscoed i ned tomeet and crush it in theiv ° - - - H,m,)m.‘ m-i\\ vy of sleep g in waking 1 moved her toanothep | embr the second e it to pass —— n{ » 2 A plicable ile one sou place. Presently the mouse ran back | the road guarded by s tho A w 1 1 i at oV ’x the body, ”“,'. othier \‘m to the former place, and Aa BB iated Xochitol Croen u 9 e ® ) i Jus gone out 1o ronm over the world seeking the girl, but, not finding her, s fourth insurcd pas- Q’ i i wil ; P i Bl b G A L We have also marked down our CHILDRENS' OVERCOATS, as well p \ ¥ s explanation of droums socims (o died AT il eutting i LI..I as a great many broken lots in our MENS' OVERCOATS. 4, P wve reccived wide-spread recognition | wood in the fnck I oll the soul materializes in £ : F i § e s |[siten o his work, when | the shape of the body it inhabited m HEMEMBER UUR wu'l“l' Money cheerfully refunded if goods do age of men, i ought | his man saw a mouse ercep out of *his ncarth s onc of the tenets of i ¢ that the soul in” dreams went ot v a | mouth and,ran away: overyonesearched | modern spimtualiam. | The Ghinese bes ) anot suit. m ’ nightly ramble even to ign lands wimal but coald not find it, and | lieve that decapitation makes headl 'Uw‘ duy 1 \\wl : pi I man '; miller never awoke In Bohemia it | souls in hade During the Taiping ' 17ih Kwalee, one of the geatry, was ou cons A dangerous to go to p | troubles much as six hundred and % rouming nd, a wild beast found his | white thirsty, s the soul was sure 1o | sixt lrs was paid for a head to hody and ity so. when the 'M"v" wander 1 of water o buried with a body, in order to make k tarned. it found only the on, but | Barine ¢ story of three | o respeetable appearance in the outer - s . x _— 4 8 o BIERIE A S R LR vway in the | world! The Austealinn who has slain —— = zi o et 5 T 1) A subst ” e ic i “““‘ |M‘“v'\ in vain for water last one of them | of the corpse, so that it can not throw St N d ; k) - ghays aiorwards walked wiih o siafh f 1y down and cop, while the | the ghastly Spear with the mutilated 0r¢ NO i " | e e sl csoarch until they | hand. A West Indin planter, wh : : ) iz wwalconed suddonly and violaily, he | found u sprin drinking thoyvo- | slaves wore committing suicide i ordoe \ i1l dic, eeause his soul s ten urned to their comeade, when they saw | that they might come to life in their S L G RDEILE | 0 L white mouso run outof his [ native lind. ca off the heads and Lands . S. W. Cor. l5th and Douglas Sts., Omaha. . e body o hofore s | mouth, o to the spring, drink and then [ of the corpses, thus effectually put- [ awnkenc I'his soul is supposed | voturn’ o the sloc In German | ting wd to the prictice w have form and color, and &t 660 L6 BoTIE S i heaba ks ha T [ C bt 0 SaOrE s REAS SO0 o= = ST = 7 = S ¢ m the souls e des ssume n [§ the soul of th s Ty to be o swall, 1 round, Nl\lm the forms of mice, when the head | drowned are supposed to remain RNGEE rational soul is infused: and these three | HONEY FOR THE LADILS plain, full, unplaited bl ing with alivming rapidity to all classes : II y. and u; ERERITT) ST the Jof w howse dies it is said | water for three yeavs, when thoy seize | in man, he adds, ave like Trigonus in | o e is still tho ro FEL red with - very large and conditions of men, women and chil= disémbodicd state, form fstandiiva sub-7 that _even the mice of the houso | the shadow of some pssing man, pull | Tetragono. ; ol o ied ais LT 0 EDLINE] (RO Rt O, ° dren. It is hovsebuck ) ject for Japanese novels and imagir bandon it, and that, in general, every [ him in, and thus effect their own The Iroquois and ~Algonquins be- At oL B D, A new cloth, which promises to be a favor- { mysg he admitted it is th ! tve literature, Pliny tells wsthat tho | apparition 'of mice 'is' considéred a | escape.’ Boatmen are in continual | lieved that the soul which gave bodil e O O i ftienoon | ndzol (TR HeTpiLERADXIC | soul of Hevmotinus, oue of the embodi- | funercal presuge; the funcrat of St. | dread of these demons, and stone pillars [ life was of a vegetative acter, and | A anderooar 15 shown in silk-like | this country, but in London, where it has | that Washington society ey ments of Pythuagorns, was in the habit | Gevtrude, represented surrounded by wrocted on the spots where they | remained with the corpse after death Lo I ailk ke Bt des non mraising 1t ighiy, | itself up to. Everyhody a8y ‘h o leaving hix hody and \\':un}l--rl\ £ into | mice, being thus accounted for. were drowned in order to control their [ until it was released by being reborn G Bishin s e T Mrs. [ila Kelly of Hoopston, ML, has | beautiful days. and” these plotuvresqus ('N‘l“‘ countries, wheuc 'l, roRgh The position of the mouse in the folk- | souls. Dumascius tells us_that, in_a [ into another body: while the cthe hing Low of ribbon with loi to be sent to the | suburban roads and the windln(w kg \'x|u|1u yous | ccounts 0f VAFOWS | 1o of the soul is nt quite elear. ‘Tho fought near Rome by Valentinian | soul, which roamed at will while the | T C0r PAC A G PEC R R ot sille diately after | on the mall south of the White hol things which could not. havo been ob- | N0 os boitove. that urding apward \inst_ Atili, the slanghtor on both | body was asleep or ina trance, after D roltone i koo UsIG : 1t will be of white | ave fill wnd nCeTRoGRTN fy tuwwed by any one but it person who Was | wigh the smoke from the funcral pyre | sides was so great that none oscaped, | death departed directly to_ the land of avis model for an opera cloak is u dead Cmrolncrog ilidoco: LiadinactiSkic | miblimg bearng all sortsof human: & Be 2 pre N'}"‘l- e body ;“r-;"” l.i.m;‘m the soul rises and floats cast 10 the | and, when the bodies had all fallen, the | spirits. — Infants AT buried by S pde trimmed with cock fonthors, e R . | burde ns. B ¥ di b vy MGt (A AL on of the vising sun; but if its pus | Souls stall stood upright and continued | sides of paths, that ‘their vegetativo Jivees Mme, Carnot wears a crown = e RIS e b bR gy "1\\ Sl v (ASL OILOC YIS0 Ll v has been sullied with crime or | fighting three whole daysand mights, | souls might l."“1" 3}“‘.‘1‘ th "I’} e ol corn, gled with diamonds. od clotk, and camel’s hair. White crinkled IGO0 x}vvl_fl;u wit x\~n were, ained with human blood, it is frans- ther inferior in activity of hands or [ moth and v e .'v'[~”f'1{. ‘;‘jm‘j | Hats have round, flat brims, and are | mandavin b fur is for teimming durk wfinw ofits sheath. St. Augustine dinto a rat und must remain four | fierceness of mind to living men. The | hastened. Among the duc "I usiicmes mmed en couronne with tips of featiie wraps, while N dnE RO W s 1.»\ s the story of x! nl\m who visited un- inarat-hole to be purified before | i sof the soul were scen and the w placed his 1h‘u]uj l»;-xH L zenerally matches the cos- [ furaish the trimmings for white ones. A ot .I‘,x ind expounded ¢ rtain passange ve the joys of heaven. My Ving of their armor heard. st of the dying, anc IAu‘n._ 10] ‘l‘ll:"' of both being the same. The New York exchange for women's work in Plato, which formorly ho had rofusod s e e oot |y Tiehaen ot the oluralityiof ithekisoul m over the head of a relative, blew ery mewest umbrellas have | bogan ten years ago with thirty articles for to do, and afterward, when questioned | o 8un L SN iniliey-way 15 callgd the | is met with in the oldest records of | through the expanded fingers. in order [ handles of Mexican onyx in various d sale. The exchange now sells aunually mor why he had changed his mind, denied | oG i the mouse being a well- | man, and is univ pted by | that-the next ehild born to him might Empire gowns all show long-waisted than $500,000 worth of thin made by that ke had, but admitted that ina | oo %ol of the soul, Miss 1 hipson | savage tribes to-d ptians [ be the representative of the deparied. | but short fronts, This is the Parisian mode, | Wome: ) eturns in the | pre dream he had expounded At the Temple of [sis, in an yptian priest, in the presence of AN o T disciple PPorph, drew noma al ¢ its | considered man to have a soul, ba, | Certain — tribes on the Pacitic { Embroidered stockings exhibit every v kislonofiwore el I008 1 ssbl says that the dormouse, from awnkening from sleep | with the | represented by a hawk with® a human | coast believed that one of [ riety of elaborate clocking and ornamenta- veturn of spring, some. | head; a shade, khebi; aspirit of intelli- [ the souls — had its dwelling | tion. g times employed in ec | | gence, khu, into which it became | in the bones, and, if these were ¥Empire green,a color similar to Nile green, vt as a type of (h-\x_m.muml Per ingred 054 “boing of light;” an ox- | planted, they would germinate like soed, | i m favor for striped crape or tulle: ball | I, pleasant aud “‘wenteel” way of g dittle pin money has been fourid in new feminin fad for wood-carvi » tools required are of the lightest, r lo on the grolnd, 1 decked outwith the customary astro- | us that the | istence, kai besides life, ankh, The [ #nd produce human Teings. The Cho dross B quiring the exertion of no muscular strength logical signs, und theu invoked from | (1qady which some nervous persons | soul, ba, only revisited the hod saws believe that every man has an out- The hair may be worn cither high or 10w } in their manipulation, and almost wny 1he body of Plotinus his own soul, | Sa8"nt’ the sight of ovon u huemiens | Hebrews have nepesh, the anir tide shadow, shilombish, and an inside | this winter, and there ave various ways of | woman with n quick cye, a little artistic 3 £ LR i v hich survived | dressing it. feeling, and a_steady hand can master tho shilup, both of body. The Sioux be to face with it. 80 that hie stood fuc Goethe positively as | v when | ruah, the human principle of life; and. o ) erts that e | s polieved that in this form un- | nechamah, life considered as an inspir- had u similar exporience. Avistophanes | Jyyivon souls or unbaptized children | ation of the Almighty. and from th tells us that Pisunder betooi himself to | ;100 their former homes, and from | the Rabbins taught “the threefold n h a certain lake to see hissoul, which had | 4o uny legends that report the de- | ture of the soul.” The Persians divided | While the th deserted him, evoked by Socrates. parture ~of unhallowed souls in the | the soul into five parts: The feroher, or { OVer the body. Mrs, Bastman tells us { nally acros Ihe belief of savages in the possibil- | Gy ne of this timid creuature. sensation; the boo, intelligence; the | that the Dakotas extended the number | phe Lt ity of the soul leaving the hody dur- | SPEPS 0T THE BTSRRI - onor of | rough, imagination, volition: the akho, | Of souls to four, one of which wanders | though the, world, .I|||lllh‘l hovers | effeet of height. mouse isa_survival of the time ved in throe | . Pure white gowns of cashmere and | artina g Sicilienne are popular for debutantes at an | wood-carving ¢ SE 3 SRV 3/col [ " souls, one of which went to the cold | Jromgon tea supply au occupation in which women who world, anothc 0‘,0 ltl_m ‘u-;‘u-..l. ,“;fill'.‘i The plain coat sleeve is not much worn, | £0into it for somcihing more tha nusc- d remained and watched | 454 then oniy with bands of velvet diago- | ment will find, if they are arlists, one wore it. welcome resd ks’ time. If the taste for ntinues o increase it will hats have low, flat are trimmed so as to PEPPERMINT DROPS. ‘ ing life has been widely trae In | oing human soul-benrers. The hea- | conscience; and the jan, animal life, Of | through tl - western Afric when a wan then Bohemians thought that the soul | theie, the first one alone was accounts around the vill; 2S501 Black silk stociings are embroidered up Rye flower—the whisky blossom p'p \\ll}l pain in I\ln‘}.)wl‘\" or flow out of the mouths of the dyine in | ble for the deeds done in the body. Th lived, the third sty .:\Unil n:'-l..lmn‘ Alyf the leg in imitation of buttons The baby’s worst habit seeins to consist in 3 it is hecause his spivit has w the shape of birds. Grimm s such | Chinese believe in three souls and the fourth goes to heave e Hand bublonnajos: chewing. gum abrond in the night und b ideas were common in pagan Scandina- | spirits; the latter,being animal,go down | tin ( enlanders the soul took the o ted continues in high favor, but its stron It 15 the fu vho 100 noor to Shire somo other spirit. The Fe i Tt he i or Somand it is said | into the earth at doath, whila, | form of a shadow, the other that of the | effcts are subdued by combination Witk | nur 15 who do the carrying teade of the ! tieve that the spirit of a | 2 . ha T 6 breath. The Fecjecnns distinguished | neutral colors Ut tes. « 8 that souls in the form of singed birds [ of the souls, onc goes down into £ . 5 . the body to trouble othe people when ' between a man’s dark spirvit or shadow Macrame lace s 08t a8 Iy made as The trouble with De Lesseps was simpl 4 f 3 1 Wit wbout the nether world like swarms | hades, the sccond enters the coftin, and | between a man’s dark sy £ 3 | old-time knitting, ax rtunately, i ’ 7 ' i asleep, ind, when and one faintsor dies. P 9 I , i which goes down to hades, and his | eld-time knitling, and, fortunately, is coming | this: He put too much water in bis bonds X N e and.onofuintsor Ciot | of fies. Mhe Bohemians thought thut | 18 luid in the grave, but is ot eatisiied | N £ BT nto favor again a0l e n ble 4 is spirit can be brought bacic by call- | 15 Nupod souls flow resticssly from | With its dismal abode: while tho third | light spirit, the ono that vellects in 7y 0 0gies who are waking their dobut | 1 ! \ rit. Du Boise tells us that in i y witer ov a mirvor, and which remains OUNg S50 10.8T6 INAKIEI0 10N, \ere is no real objection, after all, to hav ften at nt hoard the | tree to U until tho bodies were | 1i s around its old home, and with ¢ praiidahion el wear ball dresses of white tulle trimmed | jng men £o out betwoon aets ab the theater M Jomy KROIHGANZ. e e o e the | burned, when they had rest. The | the sccond soul receives the worship of whoniholdios, CBhoRMuIg RSy BDY MM wishiyshitallio Thic objection 15 to huving them ¢ back pheans was found by reporter st ) '\. :m T;mlm» .‘ An‘ln lu'\ l.nillll by ; ¢ | Pinns and Lithuaniins and later neavly | its posterity. The Hindoos designate the saina, or mnf‘l. vanishes at de llf. Bluck silk dresses are very fashionable Awomnn! can. drive &' bair. of dsahlug 1105 1 EBXIDLNED, N T4 S0t 1 streat, who' fuse ."“; Ll ‘1‘ By et AL i [ 2 ndo-Earopoan people U | batwoon Brahmatmah, the. bronth of | the aina, or life, bocomes mere air, [ wade up in combinution with colored Sill | niss, u pargi. an drziimont or o Wone but | Hist 3 stateinent of tacts, L ame clot |‘\\ i1l be )» pread on the N mnl“u\\ut.x Milky Way the Bir Way ~that is,the | God, and jivatmah, tha breath of life, while the matoaton, or ghost, hovers | faiile and black lace. When it comies’ to'a little” Ant.headod” ek |‘I\I": loig carneiltar an 1““,“‘.:’ 1.!'{1‘.5‘."3 '8 - .«'n...) .\I.m-: 1 l.. .m‘ it, .lvnn ; u“l. ni.'| wity f souls. The Moslems say that the | The Khonds of Orissa have a fourfold | around the tomb. rlish ser owns of Roman-red are | O my! two About the time | commenced work e by A o et A woinh | souls of the fuithful assume the form of | division of the soul, the first soul heing e T S AT half concealed by elaborate braid — cmbrod “Where's me beer!” cried the tragedian, | g there i noticed that breathing througlh name A, do come buck! A i | Slowvhite ivds, and nestie under tho | absorbed by @ Boord, ordeity, the s n / eries in black and goli. stalking hahindithe L aaor o don't K 1 B0 was bucoming more i ult, i trau | |y!xA>’t. .l.w‘ ‘flx!lln{. A l\‘] : l‘h’ ; !T.l throne of Alluh between death and the | ond is reborn into suceceding gener: To whom it may concern: There is only Ev 'lH" of lT are m‘-l‘lv up in white, °sir,” cried the small boy, “but Lhink ivs du | Rt i ot o bad that | cotld hardly mother goos in front with a lighted | [AEHIG % L T8 EE0R ot s | tons. the thivd goes out in dreams, and | one day more of leap year. nand rose. [n some dresses all thest ) the Supe Mt theonghile and onty partinily tisaty lantern in hand, burning paper money | M08 : ¢ nt_ sy Baifonnthidias N Rer White, of the Savoy Chapel vs are worn togethe 3 The poets continue to vave about the pur- | rightone, this compelied’ me to hreath Al 'y Rt | the | the fourth dies with the body. Rev lite, of the Savoy el A at every corner, The father follows nediaf ) UnHl the, | %0 | A AR e 1y | Londonstates that ot 000 couples which huir is worn dressed a little lower [ ity and all that sort of thing of marble, in [ entieely throush my mouth, and mornings wh 1 with the sick boy’s clothing in his resurreetion. the souls of martyrs, ue- [ Plato lo wted in the human body | pitOiaialis (it & iy one i | than it was last scason. In some cases it | sp the fact that tombstones ave the | §voul '\‘:,;""“.':,"“,'.;,‘,,‘.'313.'3":?." w0 ; T R A TR T cording to tradition received from Mo | threo »quh. the ratigual mlnE 2 aiaLeL 8.0y auite covers the nape of the neck, awfulest liues on earth, B Bha ittty ot would: gl An insect on the roof is caught, folded mmed, rest in heaven in the corps of | Immortal sou oceupying the “Jriendship is like the ¢ tie, [ 0 Juckets, made of braid and beads W a man dies and leaves a Mee widow | tiully cle of the phl wvhich would ses nicely in paper, and put beside itiful green bivds who eat of the | head, the lower souls occupying That joins two souls in amity ; and lined with bright silk to match the acces- | with plenty of mouey, a see her walk- | cimulate there during ! ) fruits and drink of the rivers in that [ respectiveiy the region near the hear But love is live the cobble sories of the costuine, are now worn. ing out with the exc after Dyl sick boy's ' pillow, and thus the face like an [ noons, a change is i Halo hats, Sl 0E Speiow, Cand (SRR oo rogion. In China on the |and the abdominal region below It pierces through the soul and 4 comes from losing bis At | itwant, day of the period | dinphram, the latter subject to and samuel Miller, aged ninety-six, and Anng | aureole, arc of da, rich velvet and are A gentleman of this ¢ who had heard a | ¢ 1 : BOIRe! g ) urning ~ for the dead | nected with the higher “by being Hagen, nged seventy-one, were married last | likely juite popular this winter, sermon on “Robert | vent to bis eves i th o1 my noRe. § cov follows its veturn home. Le g th W g ) [ ] a ? ! ; T f ! i s 8 g aoUawe e xowurn. home:. aLe wo paper birds resembling | ened to the spinal marrow or cord. Thursday ut Jefersonville, Ind. There is no The fronts of French bodices are now ex- | cluband spent an hour I a sketeh | th i Liaving eos R QIitarasoun\ea alory, lourrontamang Packd on high poles in front | these lower souls, the thoracic was the | Feason to four that this warriage mag prove | tremely short, polted an inch or so helowy | of Kobx n J i it T i e & S L | of the house of mourning. = These birds | scat of energy and ur while to the | @ failure > $ the waist line, and covered by u gird 1t Ui b 1 night,” says | b < i woptumn | whose favorite son having died, jour- | ©f o urnin I 88000 SNOLEY MG RURST) : A woman who had been twice divorce Resoation sawan aro eut yary 1aw:in [rony cal ex Phat's good advice for it N ator so ax neyed to the lane of souls for his recov- | &re supposed to carvy the souls of the 8 e ged the appe came into the supe court of Norwich, ) ce bemg filled in with the wh the girls, but if you ar young mun you stril. Mis pr me seomed 4 ery. When onco there, ho begged go | departed to elysium, and during the the desives, and the greed of Coun., for a third divorce recently. She was and a liberal display of gearl rib- | bad better court the fresh heir 11 declde "7 i e him o teial, : for his sou’s soul that the Indian [ POXt days prayevs are adiressed | Aristotle divided the soul into the advissd €0 wait thro s before she asked | hon i If the Chicago railway managors continuo | 545 Klsd 1aid, for, P 3 Pluto finally gave it to him in the form | to the ten kiugs of the uddhist hades, | ative, the perceptive, the locomotive, | the court for another divorce. A’ dress of pale pink crape is made up with | to monkey with rates and violate the law of | Fie w cumiiation of 1 Ty 1 and size of & nut, which, by pressing he- | €a!ling ou them to hasten the ilight of the impulsive, and the nos all but Mr. James Baile ) Towa man, married o | white silk and finjshed with clabovate (rills | the land, they aro migily Hable 1o be strack | fact ail of tho toubles | have spokenasmmm ' tween his l|.m<l.~: he forced into a small | the departed soul to the Hindoo pava- the L r being shared w wimals, | second wife two days after the death of the | and jubots of wide Valencicuncs lace the | by the cow-catcher of the inter-state | end B leathor b Instructed to place the | dise. On the Bosporus flocks of bivds while the nous was divine, perhaps pr fran, dad {4 _"I»‘“'“ Juss glgbtyehice dovsijigide, . 0 i It is said that a Mincap man whoat E soul in the hody of his son. who shero. | About the gize of & thrush fly up existent and imperishable. Among the | 10 remove tho last adiniring nelgh ,‘,’,'3 Wk | 8 Groany Housg olored | tempted Lo commit suicuie - the cther day by Lo upon whould come to lif, ‘the happy | 40Wn the channel, and are neve Romhns the question of the plural soul Yo T alivoe | bslpdalson avan sgvediby.thoibolive ang i YOTOR futher hastoned buck, whoro he was | 10 est on sou or lund, and are believed | is open to discussion. Ovid says: *The | i France. The demands w. deritiuhble i8 0f “four directory e reoted with dancing and rejoic )y the boatmen to be the souls of the | shades tliv vound the tomb; the unde; by the wives, and those who had been mar. Lgth 50 muot g - 3 } §¥ishing to tako part i ‘thoss festivi. | dumnod, condemued to perpetual mo- | world receivos the imagesthe spirit scelc | ried from fvé 0 ten years wore ‘the most oy onaulals don A Aleviart man naied dmukreorbis Lot J CRESAP Mcco‘ [ ties, ho handed the boy’s soul for safo | tion. Pliny tells that it is stated in (Pumulum circumyolat umbra; | Bumerous in deeking release from matrimon. | jougz strings of ‘beads pendent from their | anothor name. 1t i understood that he has . [l two divor ial bonds. Thers wi s granted | Jower edg 18 for wishing a change: keeping into the hands of a squaw. | Proconnesus that the soul of Avistoas t nanes; spiritus astra petit a8 ¥ s St the strongest reas S { empted by & curiosity which has | was seen to fly out of his month + | In his “ristin” he claims that, while “‘,’,j,';“x‘.jtfi‘,:,“{.;:[j plos who had celebrated | Avwure royal aad wmoire aro seon in all | An experiment recontly made in thate of Bolloviis Haapital M. | proved so fatal in all religious cults, tho | the form of & raven. The Azteos his immortal spirit soars aloft into the | Sy SGCCETNIER a0 toun e | Colors and large brovados in steel aud biack , | proves that the tortise cau walk s v | woman opened the bag to peep intoat, |1 d thav the souls of those | vacantair, hisshade will be wandering | oujleq the ret, Honeymoon, "neither bride | S1e ‘;“‘1 black, and ethor.combinationsiure. | 1our Districy mos: r boys should bocron when the soul escaped and returned to | killed in battle, of prisc amid Sarmatian ghosts. Hardonin | nor groom having any ides wiere they RUSRspraeg. . . £0 at once to Scotland and study the ways of \ the land of the dead. Turner tells us | sacriiced by the enemy, und of | says that the Romans made n distinc- | gomg. The iden s not new. For vears many [ Black sitks, with magnificent borderings in | the native tortolsc that the soul of Puepucmni was wrap- | women dying in childbirth, 'went 1o the | tion between the souls of the dead and | Young people have. married without havini | WRERIE FEEREL SO0 S0 ponany, ax Awong tho offcots of a tramp \Am po 3 pod up aud carvied around in & leaf. | sun, whero they pas vears of de- | their shades, umb The form any idea where they were going, or how tney | 4y 4 Uit O RAER over aid B LY-6 LIGK SR iR LS e 'ho Ojibways describe how one of thoir | lightful existenc thon turned | were supposod to remain on ocarth, | Yoo ol to gotthore whon thoy dui know, | PN T e and Fronch cash | of monéy . poiitics not only corrupts tho | 5iZira Uivermer ';( Yo York & chiefs diod, but while they wore watch- | into birds and animated the clouds witn | while the latier were removed either to | housckeeping. ) AneY ¥ &9 weres are extremely pretty forevening wear,. | ballot-vox in Indiana, but leads to luxurious = HAB OFFICES = (}lu the body on the third night, his | their »Iu'lllme plumage and harmonious | Elysium or Tartarus, according to the Joseph shipe, aged twenty-five, and Mar- | 8nd embellished with bands of galloons” | and extravagant persoual habits. No. 310 and 311 Ramge shadow camo back into it, and he sat | voices, frce to rise to the vaults of | charactor or actions of the doceused. | gurett Douglus, aged ten years, wore en. | 1 Preference Lo lace. The reason why the dying gladiator is 50 | Corner Fifteenth ana Harney st umnu:, up and told them how he had traveled | heaven or to descend to varth to taste | That the idea of a triple soul ling Eagod 0 be mareied thirty-ive yonrs ago in | . Capotes of velvet or folt are targor than | much admired,” Fthelred, is—boc I FAA PR (- to the river of Death, but had been | the nectar of flow When o Kuilta [ in England we know from Sir Toby | Eust Tenuessce. Kelatives objected on ac- | those of lust winter. — T'hey have high bor- | keops his mouth shut. He s very ifforent with sticoess. | stopped thore andfsent back to his peo- | diesit is thought that the soul is car- e Y O wolfth | count of the s youth, and the marria ders and low crowns, and are profusely de from our modern gladiators, who are all Note dan M. Jondah el R} ple. The Malays do not like to wake a | ried to the spirit land by a little bird, | Night,” asking, “Shall we rouse the | Was postponed from time 1o time. Having thors, Qver the cauntry Riow akous what shoy | don clan for Dr, McCoy, 18} OO & eloeper, lest they should hurt him by | and, if it has been a wicked soul, it is | night-owl with a catch that will deaw | 8¢ last reached an age when they could afford of two thicknasses, tho | @re GOl to do us soon asthoy get lnto “cou- | KO A%, vear and, s tie phyecis disturbing his poay when his soul isout, | overtaken on the N e . [ A § to ignore outside objections, the ceremony | outer one of silk und the inuer one of bal: [ dition. nads o ciirs (e bave' bosn v A48 ol 18 OUb, ¢ ovQurat Dy J'8A SOUIN 0Nl of one Weavens which made two loving and patient bearts | briggan, are popular Phey will stund “Tnere, 0y daughter,” said the old man as | 'y <8 PARGF dical diseusos treated skilltully, - Gg ook from his | 100 Hright's daeaas Daanami rn' John Lubbock has traged this be- [ & hawk or othor bird of prey. Amony | says that the peripatetic philosophy, | Do was performed las Sunday almost any amount of wear. e took B torn-looking e d V the ches e hi J and v ) g 3 o ools ) 1] 9 v v p otb . - v ey . t o i ¢ in |_hu power u”lu soul to leave | the Apaches the owl, the es and | which governed the schools in the tim: A munister and his wife entered a lawyer's A favorite skirt for wear with the haund- | pocketbuok, *“therc is my wedding presgnt, 8 | and all NERVOUS DISEASES. Al and return to the body to the inhabi- [ perfectly white birds were regarded as | of the old English dramatists, assigued | ofice iu Chicago and usked for a som Javorite akirt for wear with the bundr | Phock. for 20,000, God - bicss yous¥ MO, | Cailar o' tho sexes s speciaieys RN nts of Madagascar, the Veddahs of ku:doall\g souls of divine origin. The | to every man three souls—the vegeta- | The lawyer granted iv ou the spot. He be- [ white silk muslin, It hasa decp ew, above | thank you, papa; you are kind and gener- | CUIED eylon, the Mangaujas of South and-tho | Maricopas believe that after doath they | tive, the animal, and the rational. In | ingsjudie us well. The woman offered to pay | wh ich comes & cliisicy ous,” éxuming the clieck; “but isn't this tho | GONBULTATION al oftice or Ly saally same check you gave sister Iilla when she | * Yorubans of West Africa, tie Tongans, | will return and live in their ancient |his = quaint owell | he lawyer, and ho said she could only pay | A guuner gown is wade of g 0 Bt day office Kours fro A A A T o e homes on the banks of the Colorado [ tells T -y c-'.}t:qfl-l. bim by marrying him, and as the divorced | & Qe kown 18 woade of glace Vel | was marricd! b T L R A B "'fl.’.;f..fi".t"' ; _ Frequently the soul in its mundane | river, where their heads will be turned [is animated with three souls: | husand standiug by promptly assonted to | gilk wuslin, trimmed with point laco and e— W disaios (ot i o ‘ journeyings took the visible guise of | into owls and the other parts of their | with that of plauts, called the vegeta- | BETEOFE the coremony Hhes Mot o enit (o | bordered all around with Russian sable. Soclety iu the Baddle. 00 s khe masi g ’L:“"‘ 3] some animal, Grimm tells us how | bodiey into differcntanimals., The Iean- | ble soul; theh-with the seusitivo.which | tuiarstand why averiags tasy uot bo botiia | A black velvet jacke t iu Spanish atylehas | Haltimore Amerigan: Washington so- | KUCCESKUL fio3tiAL " HiiAY kA & Kiug Gunthram’s soul, while he slept | nas of Brazil think the souls of the'|all hrute animals have; and, lastly, the | success and a failure. ashirred blouse of white sursb. Auother | clety hus & new crde, and it is sproad- | FHEIK HOMES.

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