Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 29, 1889, Page 13

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= f fwm wh g UNION SEWING MACHINE. Public: OUR RECORD:| Ty lir Lompetl We have dispensed with canvassers, We Have RCdUC(‘d th E\DEHSC 0 wma s sswv macmnves aey | Erot Pramium and Gold Medal at The. Selting 0ur Machines : ’ H H cing away with canvassers an Rduced Prces! wnrld s Expnsnlunu :i{rizg ofr custher:};he benefit of th: commission usually paid to agents. ; ; The reason you ask a higher price Call and get our prices. It will pay o1 to investicate this. A Q \ ic; yzlgremne:gilne i:nnote because they e DTAAED SN VARSI N 55 If this statement is false, we wish In all respects. The lightest running PleaSant TGSfimOHia|S RGCGiVGd EVGry Day you to contradict in public, and have shuttle Sewing Machine in existence, - made arrangements with the publishers and the only %nachine that will sew Fl‘ om OUF Customers. of this paper to afford you all the space backwards or forwards, making a per- you desire, free of charge in which to fect stitch either way. READ THE FOLLOWING: contradict it. OFFICE AND SALESROOM: G Wli’eptfingélfiliké??) OFFICE AND SALESROOM: : We have used the UNION SE G or six 1607-1609 Howard Street, vesrs.wna it nas grven entive sasitmarion. - 11607-1609 Howard Streef, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Park Place, Omaha, Nebraska. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. MRS, MONTGOMERY SWIFT. | and at the races; they were asked to | profession, woudered how long he | charming woman? Don’ Lfm\\u, I have | He quietly bent over the flap of [ p-esence atthe fashionable resorts of dinners, picnics and bails, and when | would remain in those outlandish places | not said it.” I i Jossica’s neat Russin-leathor bag, but ( late summer or carly London Truth: Jessica Wynne had | poor little Jessica did geta card for a | where wives were an impossibility, "Bu gorious. Am I maid, wife or | saw “{ll‘{]“lo'!l?:‘]u!“sh'L M. S, Three months later A young married woman of Watertown waving brown hair, merry dancing | dunce, the entertainment puin- | and occasionally reduced her admirers | wid ,Y\w i R 5 “A b, lxis paids 'l) 1o game ll}!l.l‘n'!‘s as ing on the seashore only a mile distant has obtained a verdict of §2,000 uganst her rod lips, nlways parted over small | Jully reminded her of the break- | to frantic dispair by annouu « “Not a miss, certainly,” with a fine mine. '/ ion, interrogatively: “They | from a protty village near Bagni di | father-in for slander, BIERLYOL. DS, §.WAYE . pA ; ing-up festivities of her school, | intention of joining Captain Swilt | contempt on the noun. spell? . Lucea, looking as tresh, crisp and fair | A white won white teeth. a round waist und abright, | |y o'the white frocks so hopelessly | wherever he might e sent next. W) +Of course not, or you would not have | “Jessica Montgomery Swift.” as betore her first disastrous London | 8ccking a divorce in the superior court. As fresh complexion; she was bavely seven- | predominated over the black coats, Re- | as f :h self-immola i | deigned to be even decently eivil.” A dead silence followed. Jessica lay | campaign, only there was a mv\\ u-n.u- - | sho only married a China man the matoh teen,n perfect edition of the pocket | membering all these the girl set b maduoss, sho peusively concluded | **Frankly, Lam at fault” now. Ts i | back ugninst the cushions motionless, [ ness in the dancing brown c S1DALL Do ol by 2 Venus and the possessor of a fair por- | teeth hard, gathered her eyebrows into | that it was wiser to_await his veturn to | wife? Is it widow?” witha crimson flush on hor cheoks and | lifted them trustfully to thosd of & tall oo ousekenper ol okbonHIEN tion. These were her nssets, ngainst | a resolute frown and vowed that if she vilization and to England. “L own there may be reason for a | forchoad. Captain Swift felt thatsome [ man on whoso arim her small hand [ fhiHen the other dus, but returned it to which stood the fucts thatshe lived in a | had lost ber first innings she would be | Sometimes—not very often—Jossica | doubt. You see, it 1s difficult to be a l"“"“'l mystery wus about to be dis- | rested. cancer, It was the first gizzard she ever saw, qmet country-house in Wales, that she | even yet with the London world. alone, and then she would look at | widow without naving been a wife, and, | ¢ losed, and that the woman by *And 80 you are really,truly notsorry A young couple wero murried in the state had neither father nor mother and had Miss Wynne had not forgotten her fin the gl and smile quaintly, | 88 men don’t marry -vnrlu nowadays, itis [ was gathering strongth for a great ef- | that you néver denied your marriage | senatec iber.at Springfiold. Young peonle ‘been since her babyhood the charge of vuw or else fortune favored her. A | “Isp’t it funny?”’she murmured, scan- | equally difficult to be a wife. However, fort. He generously repressed every | with® Miss Wynne?” she said, coux- | with st artlingly original ideas upon marringe a widowed, childless aunt. blessed with rlater Mrs. Polsover died, leaving | ning her features. “I am sure I am | s noothe mlm. has been inveuted, I | sign of curiosity and astonishment, and uwlv are continually cropping up. a philantbropic turn of mind and more ImU her money to the lady helps, the | not quite so fresh and protty as I was have a husband.” waited her plensure. ot sorry at all, darling, as it saves The honeymoon is that part of married life solicitous of sparing labor to her lady | other half to Jessica,who became almost | two yoars ago,and I don’t think I am '\mll no wife, although T have been | ~ After a few momonts she turned to- | mo the fuss of communicating i when the brido spends her time in trying to helps than of contributing to the vleus- [ an heiress. When six months had | nearly as nice. And yet—then no- fvard him and spoke slowly and hesitat- | answored Captain Swift. +T'm desper- | find out what her husband likes to eat, and ures of her niece. However, on the { pussed a little paragraph appeared in | body even looked at me, while now— idower! Hum! L should not have | ingly. ately glad, though, it’s ull settled and | e spends his tinie in trymg o eat it after whole, the odds wore in favor of the | several Welsh papers containing the | Her eyes sparkled. “Oh, my blessed | thoughtso.” A *I throw mysolf upon done with.” 'Z 149.000 500 1 Z , girl, who, being gifted with a fearless, | following intelligenc husband, what o sorvice you have | ‘‘No, nota widover. I was married stain Swilts domot dony ciy e ———— youni lady of Wheoting, W. Va, roc independent nature. contrived to make lerstand that the beautiful rendered me! And to think I shall | without my knowledge, my mistake, in | morrow that you were ev arr PEPPERMINT DROPS, h"“d"““‘."" ;;::'\..'.'.“r'.'u‘ ::xl«l»‘:{lr';hflu'u‘:‘x}l{c:fl“ the most of her opportunities, and, as | Miss Jessica Wynno, at the expiration | pever, never be able to pay you!” default. The newspupers married me— | Jessica v"\%lfl-).i" ,'.)",,'1’5;".1""""‘59,“"“" The London acronant started a paper called | The young man was in luck to escapo alife she grew up, became the acknowledged | of her mourning, will return to soci Towards the middle of August, with | I heard of it in Indin—and so persist- { who originated that—libel, ~Give mo |, A HORION Bereustt s S partnership with 8o particular a 5 belle of the country-side. Her reputa- | as the bride of Captain Montgomery o g ently that T ot a three months’ leavo | time. [assure you that I will do my ut- f L FHI000 b Bes ) ion would bo all right (A bushfnl young of Wellsville, N tion extended us far as Cardifand | Swift, This gallant officer now on only to make myself a free man onco | most to undo whiat T have done.” = | ‘Th bourdink bouso hon wauld bo all righ Hora 8 45 sliic urmbroiel o oA SouE Brecknock, and no county or garri leave will, however, shortly uiter the I left the . and O. three da, Bhe looked fyary young And faie, with | S gm0l o it it Soig o aanamyis y-ssudlug the host /proposat oL LiRERIAERY ball was deemed n succes s Miss | honeymoon be compelled to join his reg- ago, wnd am on my way to the Bellunes [‘;‘\"\',]“t"l"““':‘f oYesiiand imolgk “"“’"I‘"- “Don’t know, 1'm'sure. 1t always has.” 9. sonsidaredaro. eomDBASES Wynoo was prosent. Sho was rted | imont abroad. : _ | Scotland with a young married couplo to e yhiskthey wore shpugin :“l.']‘“l““l‘] WListon 10 e, and forgive mb it yod | y Man want's but littio hor bolow but when | Yiahine to be marriod. . Maidos Tt oter to these festivitics by some obliging | This announcement, shorn of loeal | who had taken uhouse on Loch Lomond | their nearest ve to e dabeled alll, haal LAiok cams YO | e can’v get it ho is in want of everyuhing, sventy-five are barred out. chaperon, to whom Mrs, Polsover | hyperbole, graduatly found its way into | for two months. She had not been told | ©Ver the world as booked and done for.” | cun. ~When I fivst came to London, at | “non will striko for shorter hours, but the TR e foh T trusted her sometimes for a couple of | tfio Birmingham ana Manchester | whether or not there would be othor “A hard case,and one deserving of | eighteen, I found 1t a horrid place; only | earth continues to revolve at the same old Alish f‘.,,l‘].‘.',‘,,'.',‘, ,'“, "f,‘{",‘”' 0. “,',',' M‘"- days ut a strotch, with many recom- | dujlies, and finally drifted into one or | g bt she know that the Bullunes | Much pity. So the indignity of wedlock | marvied women were admired, pevted | speed, i RS namOC LOnD LI 0I DU AR 1 : sourted—we girls wi > tin. 5he ought to be sutisfied to huve a nice mendations as to propriety and deport- | two London papers. had thoe knack of making pople com- | I8 been put upon you.' Accept my and courted—we h‘_“; were nowhero. | T js nover too late to mend—excopt when | home and she cortainly ought Lo keop. out of ment. Mrs. Montgomery Swift took a charm- | fortable, and she felt just a little tired deepest sympath, So I made up my mind to come back to | your trousers-button breaks off in & madrush | politics, As a citizen of Knzland sho bas no One never-to-be-forgotten day Jessicu 3 £ M P ible, & 38 3 W ay laugh, but it was, it is | town—married; and as [ had not u hus- | Tor the traia. Fikhe to Do Slotod hrosldtey ot ke TImiEe was invited by some scquaintances she | \n8 furnished house in Mayfair, kept u surfeit of devotion and ned to Yoy may l""’:‘ M WAL «t | band handy—they are s you | Republics were ever ungrateful. Wo put | States. : in d by some acquaint y odious. All the fellows out there affect L v perfectly appointed brougham and vic- | escape from it and rusticate in compara- o 2 : R A 5 ad made at Cardiff,and who had taken o ey v el ikt 3 e to believe it is true—thut I ama derelict no n d o hought I was great 1 postage stamps, and then The recent marriage of Viscount Dunlo, of o gront fancy 1o her to snend twp | toria, procured her toilets from Paris | tive solitude. So, ono morning, she ] Baflnge guite safe. I wanted him to bo an Eng- | punch their heads. England, the hoir of Lord Clanchrty,. to Mixs onths with them. in. Condon immedi, | and forthwith became the rage. Her | found berself at St. Pancras station, | husband with a fotran Mg | Ron officer, because England had sucha | When you are barting with an acauamt- | Bele Hilton, a prominont music. hall o fter Kaster. Th \ 5 gowns were copied, her repartees quot- | and when hor maid, previous to secking | bere I found no end of lotters of couns | SR FeLI PP SRl (e I RIE T O | ance und he suys: “Ob, by the way—" got | has turned out disastrously. The viscoung ately after Enstor. The girl passed o | 6q hor 5 o'clock at homes crowded. | hor second-class carriuge, had settlod | gratulation. T dare not show myself at | ot of troops in places pogple nover go | CUGS S LAl has zone 10 the antipodes and his wife still yeek iv ndolnlwlgs oy of preparation | gk gave neither dinners nor parties, | her in o first class one, with her noofts, | the clubs. first I was inclined to | [0 5 FOEEEE 0 OV o “sure | Guard: Now. miss, jump n ploase; train | appears nightly at the' Empire thoater, Lon- O i et camed Of | availed hersolf of o fow of tho introduc- | rugs and drossing bag, she prepared for | treat the matter lightly, now [am de- | AoyY =~ H&is 1o = mmake - swwe = 1000007 Child: B | cau't go before 1 | don. 1vis said thut Dunlo's father will ate triumphs which would eclipse those of tions obtained through the Tressillinns, | her long, solitary journey with restful | termined to sift the whole thing, sue PR O04 J OREINE | havo kissed mamma. “Jump in, miss, DIl see | MDY to bave the marriuge annulled ou_ the the littlo Welsh bello, of IntoXicating | yio wore abroud; with charming ime | satisfaction. Howevor, justas the hour | the libelers, and give a public’ do- | o 8ty living mans 1 ohristened | i yhar,» ground that hus son was ool of « nge. AT rling B 3 ! eMaon. ) i ontgomery & aphazard; " : £ anoug o el o) the plucun ahohadread “" (i "w society | 21! the people she considered bores, and | carriage was violently opened, a mili- “To the compromising accusation G e very likely sort of husband to fi:‘\:l's":‘fiml fll»!}"':‘::‘l \V‘:N h“t‘;u‘xlwu“ run A,vlvu'r her from nsututing @ suit for breach of 9 B3N Y | plunged into the maddest whirl of social tary portmanteau and case wore thrust | matrimony? I would, if I were you.’ Kk s W 4 o g dead, their spirits flag, of narrlage, oven if the marriage is jpers; and, looking at her pretty face oot H " 1y A have, you know, and 1t scems so natural | naturally, B the glaks. sho oven hobed that 1o | dissipation. American girls gnashed a guard exclaimed, **Plenty of room [ shall,” ho said sternly. might TR, S S b hen hor | their teoth with envy when tho little | —just in timo—jumpin,sir—thank you, [ They were just steaming into the n who married a celesuial is the abruptness which characterized all her movements, Jessica, without a word of warning to her courtiers, ucceptod an invitation to spend a fortn i that he ».lmuldl fore P h«:‘ 4mon x L]Iu) “You \\.mLlly'm.v|n|vlnvmwul eh? ©ye y soolety called ““Phe 3 t > 3 3 ¢ savages-—-anywhere. Nobody seemed air” *Well, you can take th chteenth sy 000 hame. in print ne cthe lovels. Mies | '€vass widow” carried off their most | sirl” and slammed the door again upon | Carlisie station. Jessica romainedalone | SAvAEES—RIYEBCTE, NOROCY seeted o | BILD LINel, you ean Lako the whehieontl o My rele” has just boen or- Wynne” in some glorified para, ,3m e hopeful admirers, dowagers frowned, | a tall, handsome man, who had entered | while her companion smoked a cigar on | }1."4ite simply because she was not n | thercas anywhere else—six hundred lamps,"’ L;mln :;1 1 i “'Al’lln.'t':nml will ‘soon be Galonel: and Mrs. Tromiliing " Her | Young matvons pursod thei lips, moth- | hurriedly, and who, us the train steamed | the platform. She took advantage of girl, and it was all working bonutifully, | Down in Florida @ man is said to have | gub chartercd '..L.':rff.»'f.‘.(.,'.fl.,"rnfufi'ffi.u'f:"}.(;."ri future hosts, were o fashionable middie- | ©r8 of marriagenble daughters were bit- | out of the station looked rather discon- | the gathering twilight to rise, and, un- | &y, ")y 4id you turn up? “Why did you | been killed because he would 'v play poker. | only those men are eligible. for membarship aged couple, addicted to n good deal of | ter but Mrs. Montgomery Swift heeded | certed to find himself tete-a-tete with a | perceived, to examine the label on the | 7 0% " Cor o0 o godfather? Why did Doubtiess the refusal wus very exasperati who have wives who muke their lLives uns- wandering over Europe l“" quest of | them not, and reveled in her popular- | young, pretty und elegant woman. hat-box reposing in the rack. She had | gy 0w but It does seem as it cumul pumshment | pappy, The sociery already numbers 200 Rasith ana orry ST ek Ty FE Before reuching Leicoster the travel- | some difficulty in deciphering it and | "o it nave suited you to have | Wi a htle sovere, members, and, it is said, it will soon have & ealth and amusement, but generally | 147 ey A Py e v 1ind alre xobanged & f som- | fell back i the seat as the owner a s suid Reeder, “it s little wonder | mewbershin of 5,000, Ty h Who the aeuce is Captain Swift, and | ers had already exchanged a few com- | fell back into the seat a QXRSR BN S, b o 1 D of 5, oceupying a fino house 1 Souh Ken- ain Ly A pAOhAARe & ¢ ] A he car- | Kot up ! nper?” suid ople grow 'wealthy they begin to [ Miss Porcine—1 afraid, Henry, that our en sington during the season, where thoy | Where doos he hang out?” queried a | monplaco civilities connected with the | o ‘“’“’"]"",‘ onco fmoga Inte the odr- | Captain Swift, gravely, but an amused | inguire Into \helr Ancestry, ‘Tho anably 016 | gasomont wiss be brakan Bass sant our ens entertained liberally both their com- | gunrdsman of a fellow warrior parting | pulling up ana down of windows, the | riage. He fancied sho looked very vale | 550 yusgad into his eyos. first edition I8 worth wore than the most | are both very ancry with you, Henry—For patriots and foreignars, whonever they | from Jessica, when she re-entered her | loan of newspapers, ete, Instinctively | und asked her if sho was tired, She did | %GR TG 0 said Jessica | gorgeously gildod reprint. Brb pov NGty BRiy sl Fou, - HanEYm N Wwore not themsolves being Sntortained, | carriageafter her daily walk in the park, | they recognized that they belonged to | not answer at once, but as soon as the |y oy, [ intended becoming o | “Tramp—Wiil you give me a chance to get | offend them! Miss Porcine—1t is all on aoe Jessica Wynne returned to Wales at **Who cares & big D for the husband | the same social class; each discovered | train was fairly under way she said ab- | {oq 0 very soon---some of the climate warm, sirt Mun of Hou: lertainly, sir, | count of the conversation you had with the beginning of July. 1If Mrs. Pol- | of & pretty woman?” was the flippant [ in the other a certain independent, un- | ruptly out there are so unhealthy-—no one | You know that sawmill two miles down the | mumma the other night. Henry—Why, I sover had been observant she might | answer. “‘He’s somewhere on the Gold | conventional originality, and, like | s vour name Montgomery Swift?” | would have asked any questions, One | road don’t yout Weil. il gi @ you fiftoon spoko of your father in the highest torms. have noticed a shadow in the o Coast, or in India, or at Suakim, she tells | strangers meeting by chance atsome “It Is,” he snid, surprised; but glanc- | accepts anything in London when it is | ™iputes to reach it. Come, L Miss Porcine you suid he ‘‘bristles sha laughing . ind Atunar party. they' soon a0 £0 000 : i 51 Pl Bl ¥ N That thur saloonkes e - | with ¢ood sense.” You know papa is at the brown eyes, n certain compression in | me; he might be dead and buried for all 4 party, ¥ 0 N be ing at the hat ‘n the box, w)m:h‘l(\_\ In | convenient to be credulous; but if you | 10w must nave an awful big - | stockyards, and mamma thought your wllus the scurlet lips. She vaguely observed | I eare, only it much safer to know | verse on every possible subject. an altered position, he added: ‘*‘Have ¥ rée on } > are that horrid man pleaso don’t 0xposo | marked Farmor Sakus to lis nephow. [ | si0n o “orlstics” simply dreadful taste, that the girl was unusually reticent | there’s a husband somewhere; and, to “"_‘.\.‘"" propose stopping at Edin- | you guessed that, too, you fortune- | me yet.” watchied the place '0out an hour to-auy, aw’ For the past thirty-six yeurs John Holler, about hier London experiences, **Yes, | do the little woman justice, although burgh?” said the gentloman, when, | tellery” v - A “Not till [ am dead, eh?” more'n fifty hmm an’ gals went inw the | of Virginia, 111, has been recog od wher- London was very gay—plenty of things | she flirts to the nines, she ' does dvag | after Normanton and lunch, they had And you call yourself & captain?” | & can’t make him out dead now.” she | family entranc over kuown as 4 wan of fumily. The woman o in i sty Vs BV res| d their seats, continued Jessica, | i} ame harsh f . I Hurding—Have you heard of the luck tha t who pussed as his wife was Sarah C. Bush oing on, of course; lots of fine gow the captain in pretty freely; and even | resume x continued Jessicn, in the same harsh | said petulantly, “but 1 wili go away, I3 a ‘ood“mun . Oh, yos, heaps ollvnh:'mlt‘:‘ wero he to mount guard over her like a | 'r;r(lhu‘mu!n. P"i"h“l"‘i but 1[ om | voice. e oy ? & Y L':‘flt‘.‘.”::, s T.L”"p‘]‘:.."y"‘r'q'u B - No; origiually. but it was | Uought Jong o to fi " D T B 5 "t 3 d for Ve id,” vered Jes- b i arding: Ortune’'s ma ave been changed, and sho has be many of th Had sho- oojoyed | watoh dog, he wouldn's flad wuch to | D0RRA for luversual ARATANeS A L go, il T become aumajor.” = reckon he'll retire from business entirely, | as Mrs. Holler for more than a generation. hersell?”” “Of cour s0; how can she mwake a rumpus about. sica. * *Impossible! Thare is not a Captain c . ) ] 4 ta ‘at would be a pity; there must bo | fean—What hus ho donet HardingeoWiy. | The family bus grown moders Belp enjoying herself in London during | “No,” suid the other, reflectivoly, ARl with aslight start; “T have | Montgomery Swilt in the whole British | some other way to uchiove widowhood,” | e has been mide administrator of the cstase | and has raised & famnily of child souson ¥’ und answers to that effect, | pulling his mustache; “it's a case of | Some friends about there myself—rela- | urmy.” “Don's be cruel. It is dreadful, and [ | of his best fricud. whom are already murried, In fact, John he truth of the matter was that the | Canute and the sea—*just so far and no “‘3,"1“‘ S S Se et T *I bog your pardon, Tam thathumblo | know I have been very foolish, But | *‘You udvertised for a boy(" & Holler is & grandfather, To d"lvl l.l'mcum- 2 popular little Welsh belle had been | farther.’ She’s a tickiish one to deal ‘\\um er 1.' they know my friends— | officer, rdally,” she added, with a umotion | You \;vm:} 9.}\5!“.-.-_ b .\.14;;., s Do you ;ulun:i\ m'“n‘m.]u :|l v | ‘u thut Hol Izr uu: sorely neglected in London. She found, | with. I dou’t quite make her out.” at the Towers?” **Np, you are not: there is no such [ of her'old quaint coguetry, *I can’v do | Whistlet 0 F 0 Yol carve yous.| 1e COMUARIGR WAE, REVEr Ueah EaShECs “The Bellunes? ') Y ” me on desks and benches! No, sir.” | bad applied to Judge . N. Wa r o per- . to her indignant dismay, that her “She does pull a fellow pretty short I“ ¥ man in the army l\s\rlhuu\ms not a re than ask your pardon. o you pluy ball during oftice boursi" *'Oh. sore v i postnoned. He beauty, wit and repartee remained up- | sometimes, that’s a fact; but she'’s aw- _.“’,‘““-‘ s ¢ year ago. 1 ask my ad- | ng, sir! Never!™ “l'm sorry. You won'l y i 1ush is - preciated; with incressing cholor { fully jolly—no confounded sentimeut Why, Dora Bellune is my cousin, | © “Possibly not at that time, for & year hé said extonding his hand, “und | do, T wanted & boy, and. 1ndividuals who i © soon remarked that other maidens | about her—not like those old stagers | and [ am on my way to see h ago I was Monty Gordon, Last Christ- | on my honor as & gentleman, | will help | do not bebave us 1 bave indicated are not ulmuh and fair as hersel! shared her | who run you in before you know where | ¢'How very amusing! Well, I had an | mas a good old”man, who was my god- | you to get out of this sc s boys.” Wb el dgnominious obscurity. Her conscious- | you ave. " She’s rare fun, by Jove!” and | intuition that we should meet again---in | father, died and left me all his fortune |~ They talked low and carnestly for T AT e DRLONS) CLATZYINE Javs. | T4 DrOSREARES ness, whioh was not conceil, told her | he smiled with retrospective enjoy- | fact, I had quite mapped out your des- | and estates ou condidion that Ishould | remainder of the journcy. At Edin-| | g Sy S Y 3 T < A e 59 44 8 before reaching Bedford 2 : The ORIGINALABIETING OINTMENT | asked. 17 it becowes as popular an entrauce that she was sacrificed to rivals less [ ment. tiny before reaching Bedfo tuke and bear his name. I complied. | burgh they shook "hands warmly und | js'only put up in large two ounce Lin boxes, | Lo Matrimony s Chicayo 18 an GXit the gove fair, less clever, and above all, less | Foronce the verdict of clubs, mess- Let us hear the horoscopu—past, | A Swift was manufactured out of a Gor- rted. But neither Jessica nor Cap- | and is an absolute cure for old sores, burns, | ernmont should issue free family Uokets young; she realized that one and sl of | rooms and smoking-rooms was just; | present, future; the first will, it cor- | don, and yet remuined a captain, Under i Swift went to the Towers | wouuds, chapped bands, and all skia erup. | from one point to the other in order Lo make the successful queens of society were | Mrs. Montgomery Swift's morals were | rect, be a guarantee for crediting the | either upvellation, equally at your com- separate telegrams in- | tions, Will positively cure all kinds of piles- | the through matrimomal trip us inexpensive odious warried women—fast, bold ex- | unimpeachable. = Without ostentation | last.” mand, But now I must ask of yourdress- | formed Mrs. Bellume that her expected | Ask fortho ORIGINAL ABIETINE OINT- as possible. acti g, syrannical matrons, who monop- | she frequently alluded to her bsent | I consent totell you what I think of | ing bug the same introduction furnished | guosts were —unavoidably provented | MENW. Soldby Gooduan Drug sompany ab | 000 iy bocoming almost as noted for the attentions of the men. She | consort, retaifed passages from bis cor- | you; but only if you tell me first who | by my hat box, and learn by what name fom jolning her party; nor did Mrs. o0eala por-DoZ—v s #i onate. s religious conveations in June, Sevtomber and 84w those unprinecipled creutures sur- | respondence, bewailed the long exile | yow think I am. 1 can address my traveling incognita | Montgomery Swift again gladden the Au Indiana wan has married bis mother- | October, as for fashionuble asscwblages ie rounded by their courtiers at the play | and lrequeut changes entailed by his *Would you be offended if I said ® | when I moel her again at the Towers.” | heavts of her faithful swains by her | inluw. Thut is vne way of gelting even, July and August, never show my face

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