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i1 of | back from the easel, turned to his friend and NN vandalism of Mahomet IT. after the Bo D HIMSELF TO BE I'RI‘,E Coustantinople, In the prolonged contost | pointing with his brush, 2 with the Mosiem conqueror, the Poles and | = “Look!" 8o Hung/rines under John Corvinus Huniades, [ The picture was indeed giving the answer, offercd themselves to Calixtus I1T. for the | but not the answer his guest had heard. The \ 2 How Millet of “The Angelus” Struck off the [ defense of Christandom. On_ their banner ; painter had replied in the slightly opened | | | | was emblazoned, “Onward for the Faith, and the light, marked, strong, peaceful, 11 anacles of Debt, The t fell from it over the two figures. There. Galling Manacles o : o i that picture like the last book of his FRON yope asked the Christian world to join in prayer that this noble band m for fully ‘vepel Moslem i , as @ | opic of labor, - Light stied down from heaven unlied pray ved thr i in the | on love and toil and prayer. As we gaze, a . LAST TRIUMPH OF THE ARTIST. |..,..-..|..L in addition to those of noon and eve, | sense of repose comes from each carefnl de ’ , L] L] The sloge of Belgrade was & complete | tail. Tt is evening, for the sun is in the west, triumph for the Christians under Huniades | and the day’s task is done, It is Saturday [ Historical Feature of the Religious | (1435), and was so mm..nl. ing a dis 4;~| or for ni ‘(n\")u‘, ,uh”lwul\.nm .'.;,1 Weeld's anx ) . Mahotmet I1, that be could never after hear | ieties'are ended ho Sabbath of rest has Castom Which Inspired and Led thatcity naned without falling into paroxysms | come. We too, bow and with them, for to the Tardy Recognition of of rage. In thanksgiving Calixtus ordained | looking at “The Angelus’ in Millet's light, the Lad of Greville. that the aves should thenceforth be said “We smile to think God's greatnoss flows oon and night Round our ¢ » morning, ; S0 entirely had the prayer of the annuncia- | Round tion become associated ‘with the struggle 'Y E L. G between cross and creseent, that in the next HONEY FOR THE LADIE. Do A jrent maval expedition, | Fashionable ladies arc mot fond of hard o alliod Chuiatinns, and commanded | worlk, and yet they know what a toilet is to Don John of Austria, set out to meet the | dress for dinne; , {1 pecsi f » “ “ p The ,...yf:- had solicited the faithful to Tiny attored through a house for During the pasttwo weeks our time has been occupied in receiy- Men's Hand Welt C ongress and Lace S]mcs. §2.95; real bound himself that he might be f < r ¢ . ' u t 4 supplications in tho ary. The | posies is one of the pretty fashions we bring < s 9 "ly arp S e o tain speculator induced him to sign 8 con- | jat vietor ot fepanto, October 7, 1531, was | from France, 1 ing new goods which are now properly arranged and ready forin- | worth §4. tract whereby he pledges himself to give up | one of the most destruc blows Turkish Liquor flasks in cameo glass of dark wine | 8 pection. Having carefully studied the wants of the people, we can in advance all the work he would execute in | power ever sustained, and Pius V_instituted | color, and are decorated usually with white | safely state that we havethe most complete variety ofshoes and slip= O }( FO R D Tl E S. 3 in return an assured ”",'-';f....\-'(‘.'.‘{,'f{, v.l.:.\‘q‘v‘.'h.:".\ifi of the rosary, | flowers, . | pers of America’s leading meanufacturers’ make ever shown in i : ) income of a thousand francs & month. This | *py"¢fia "Roman Catholic, therefore, the | oA WOmAn nover gots through, when her | Omaha. We can show an array of Novelties in the most approved Ladies’ Russet Oxfords, hand turned, neat tip, everybody’s over agan on her grardehildren, and newest styles and patterns which is simyly superb. Every ef- [ price ¢1; our price 75c. xsesiciathaly il Ladies: Dongola Oxfords, hand turned, patent tip, sold by 1y of ‘the Sac this city.] In the year 1860 Millet, strange to say 508 was liberty, for it struck off the manacles of | «Angelus” is uniquo amoni pious obsery- L RLIL UL GO St el SR T R U b b s i p v s fo be superseding the | fort has been made to include in our varied as V1fo 6t chil 1t wore now safe and Lo, te. | 1O notos of ita boll, - straight: thtotgh work, | Purewhitc mate Every sort of toilet im- | goods; goods which shall be most valued when they have stood the f ife and children were now safe and ho re- | /s and pleasure, bidding nim pause, | Plement is found in this new form, and often | ¢}, 1.l o)y test of use and wear. Our effort in this direction has been |all at $1.25; we ask but 95c. peated again and again in his reverent joy | then and there, compelling him- to recall the | exquisitely carved. e deotdedly shddensli) N6 atotionon sldsWallt tPRsh At oD 8toreOns Ladies’ Dongola Oxfords, patent tip, splendid value at §23 that God was good to him, very good to him; | pure maiden’s tranquil room at Nazareth, to | _Flower fans are the latest caprice. Violets, | decidedly successful. No auctionor sidewalk trash at our store.One adies’ Dongola Oxfords, patent tip, splendid value at g2; 1is brow smoothed; his lips relaxed; his | remember that God descended to redeem us | pansies, lilies-of-the-vall ve fastened on to | of our main features will be our astonishingly low prices, as we are our ]H‘it(‘ but $1.25 { y still dwells in our midst, by a mystic | the faus, and ave very y arran 2 «25. i % i s « % o | deter dtodoal » business than » befor We feel satis- . - hand moved with & new grace, the grace | #nd ! L AC 1thousi o sgor | Sovoermine O & larger business than ever before. e feel satis RULEEe Atha clorda: 6 b e 8l that comes from a glad heart. True, J,‘"l‘\"‘,‘,";;,j‘:;{{,,',"fi;lL\;lf,':,,,f{,L"llL‘,,,.”,"l,‘,‘.“,f,‘? Ty sRhOugtLE > lger | e that our aim will be accomplished if Honest Footwear at Low Ladies 1“." nt Leather Oxfords, colored ooze tops, cheap the result was to go straight into the | «Now and at the hour of thi That An- The chemise and the rest of those clothes | Prices merit consideration. Every article in itselfis a bargain; all [at $2; our spu(‘l:ll at g§r1.50. hands of another, W of that! He had | gelus bell reminds him of his fellowship with | that naturally go with it do not necessar we desireis a call. Below we quote a few of our bargains, as our ies’ ~ 70 «fords, ¢ rolty or EiTe not painted for money-indeed thero biad been | & vast. religious family; for, ws the sun | como in seis? now. Tho nighttown lis | space is too limited to mention them all: ihe ) {:“d“fi 1 “‘)'\0”““ Oxfords, a novelty, worth $2.50; our Jittle money for which to paint—and now, | is always setting on some portion of the globe | taken on new fads, and is just the most com- | SPEFS S YOO = 3 S ) peculiar price §1.78. here was money assured. Not much, indeed, | his co-veligionists from pole to pole have said, | fortable garment for its purpose one ever con- Infants’ kid and patent leather button shoes, 19¢. I 1 7 s el s 111113‘](:12';?’Zedwéfficd B he New and novel Conceits, in low shoes of our own designs. ded to the | ver ng now. skirts, b2 i s button-holes, 3 AR : SRR bt AR WA Ay ¢ tencd fn | Ajain, the angelus is uniqus in being the | *With tho exception of the fullness that s | ROChester style, sizes B to 8, 75c, sizes 8 to 11, 95c. § Best quality Iinglish Broadcloth Overgaiters, in all of the ‘ome nv||~nlvl~'vlr=‘\'x:n"‘-lfl in \\)‘m“r“l,l::::l»:n:;: need of | now added to the sleeve at the top, and the guflul?ren s pebble button'shoss, hox tip, worked buttonholes, sizes [late fashionable shades, spring weights, at $1.38; actual value 2. priest ov ! d witho low, wide collar_that has almost superseded 2, o & Sttt ; i %, condition, s UL | TS Daei BEIRNG Seabon thers 1w lttls Misses’ dongola spring heel button shoes, sizes 11 to 2, $1,25, Our fine shoes and slippers for ladies’ misses’ and chil- iated. f the old *d are in unison. change in cut. The gown is less often opened Misses’ dongola spring heel button shoe: sizes 11 to 2, $1.45, dl‘()l\‘ men'’s b()).h and }'Oulh\' must be seen to be appree vill say in these but enough, and ther out his great idea, Tooms were a ottage, and all things were b this new sunshine. Ah, if it had only sooner, what happincss it might hive be- stowed, what irremediable anguish it might ve spared. When struggling with his was liberty to carry | or venty-four hours the and petticonts are as pretty as dv iest, poverty, his heart had ached and ngs in o Catholic land. The | 4t 'the side than lst seqson. worth $2, o e e I B0 e R anaite e somic 1 ts. con Lays down. | o In tiearly. evary bl of headgear there fs Ladies! pebble button shoes. solid leathen o5c, worth §1.50. Fine footwear at moderate prices our specialty. It will be Genchy, where two lo cn wero liy- | his 9ol o ¢ 1ittle flower” or leaf or sprig of grass adies’ dongola button shoes $1.50, worth ing on, in the one hope of” secing him again. | his tiveless pen and clasps his w hands. A N Rl L A e i a mistake to purchase an llnn" in the shoe line b‘ fore visitin They had died with that hopo unfulfilled, | The laborer panses with the spade in his | iterwovenin meshes of lace ot trails ]'w’l” $2, P“d'% dongola button shoes, batent leather tips, $1.63, worth s I Y 4 simply and literally because he was too poor | grasp, « 1S, r\.]..l- s{\(.”r Mr- ¢ falls 5’». '.m b sheh m’"w ot aa io: Tadles SonbolaibutionisHoes allstyles 1108, Wonth£2 78, our store, 10 0 to them and they were too poor to go to | on her the bedside of lier fever pa- o Loz L £ ¢ yles s, C 3y A him, Nothing in aftor 1ifo ovar quito con | tient rerer is calmed. by he I and forgetmenots without num- 44, L5ies” gentiine hand turn biitton shoés, all Styles, $3, real value 0 \]"t“”]‘“]l anding our great inducements in the E\d\ of du; soled Millet for that unutterable sorrow., | aftitude. The tradesman saspends his traffe | PO g e %, able shoes at low prices, as an extra appreciation of your trade o~ Words never spoke it, but it spoke itself, and is for yomember 4 land above, [ The newest evening shoes are braided with Boys’ A calf seamless button shoes, worked button holes, every 1 as a Pi Yy 2 still speaks, in his great picture called <\ wiioro tHioIasting trensiiro is'safa) from zust noLow LR B L "f“‘i:‘i‘,' pair warranted to give satisfaction, $1.95, worth $2. we shall give away $800.00 worth of useful presents, which 4 e 0 osig ed ‘g d moth and robbe The soldie ops his S Wi V] v are worn. C Strips nO ress a Pt oo o B et rna s oy s b/ VIBIOW L Doiloe || 0 pit o wboit Wth of an inch upart, RIS Gl pUas Gl beD ?‘;Ug’ flasRvomitan have dl\pld) ed in our east window. One ticket given with Pr y, having once dawned, shone | —a benign av nd i gentle mi Tho | and ave so applied that the most scrviceablé | | :’“ci%ef'sl g PoRlTATe ‘%fs b e eaosma s ohishingly every dollars worth purchased of us more and mere brightly as recognition, | little children break off their p the | and amply proportioned feet look well in ARZ 192 75, real valu cry alS WC purchase Se granted slowly at first, wis bestowed at last [ innocent langh still on their pure lips us they | them. Tlie neatest-looking are of whito kid with the abundance that is called fame. Yes, | murmur the words that tell how Chi ided w Wbk, Inspection invited. Make comparisons. Positively One Price Only. Nt long | alittle child, and abode with us, Apropos of the mew fad of decorating fish il the London edition . i g ~. seemed 1o offor suceess: out, from the ficlds of | from the psalms: *“Morning, noon and night, A corpulent turbot, I\/Iflll Ol (lCl s Pr Ol]lptly ) 1]](3(]. Normandy, the studios of Cherbourg, the | Twill ery ont and announce.” The morning Wit st tied up with orchids, hardly ap- streets of Paris;. out through silence and | “Angelus Domini,” comes like an envoy from | peals more strongly to_ones sense of the SOrToW, (lnn\l”h the epic of toil, he had lu‘.l\n'nmln‘inull \\u).'(‘nf a new V. eternal fitness of things than a herring bask- stepped forth into “glory, and that, too, with- [ and it consecrates, ing ina meadow of ferns and buttercups.” out sucrificing his idcal. Had he ercat hours Miss Mubel Jenness Mille “A new taste, or had a new taste discovered | or j woman would go to the ends of the'earth to at last lie was famous. Out from b and diMcult road, where no turning had | The old angelus bells hore this inscription, “The noon angelus calls him, or i5 it of tho nature of truth | pause from ¢ perplexities and fe find a nostrum to make herself hetter loaking, at, being sovereign, she must at last reign | strivings, remi 15 that we, too, ave but | and yot very few ever fake the trouble to own vightt The applause of the ex- | the servants of the Lord, to do His will, ac- | even learn ‘huu to stand " Most hibition of 1867 and a- first-cluss medal, the | cording to His word. The evening angelus | women, h itawircan ation of the world, the ribbon of the | aunownces that the day is over, 18] | AT wilo Wi tioutirdelin Beoaigs Legion of Honor—all these_homages greeted | echoes fill the air with p the peasant, now become “Monsicur Ia Chev- | sends its benediction to our he s the | Many acase of a weak back, she thinks, is alier.” He'r ditall with a sad smile, | word made flesh dwells in o midst;” and | que to bad walking, He had Jearned in a rigid school the meaning | when ten thousand lips have humbly asked | “rpy,¢ acsie ehemise, pr ftine mod. | FORT SID of tvanitas vanitatum.” His mother and | that, through the passion and the cross, may | o eS8 come hack s eet L grandmother were gone; Rousseau come, to cach, the glory und the vesurrcetion, | Fu¥s PS8 do you Lknow | The People are Working Hard to Have dead, leaving to his’ friend - grief | the Tast dying notes of the quivering bells | LTI , the pure white the Order Revoked which never quitted him till chime: “Amen, amen, amen ! Hien. Tasen or fin muslin chemise that ismot | 4 : o slept side by side. Madame Millet w. f = o ,m.‘,, G Stoxey, Neb, April 26.—[Spe the artist himsclf was worn out by that long The Angelus in Avt and Poetr, ita Ber.]—The subject which ha been uppermost in the minds of the people of strugg W I N The Angelus is, as we have just seen, the | daint 1 was aly 3 > hour for repose LAk : ) it i bl Sk Sl 4 recapitulation of the mystery of the annun- | be the finest hand sewing, the tin Sidney is the abandonment of the fort here, ) I ing. His last pictures in the threo 3 Y Vi retiic 5 > ) y 0 yestore. rreat extent of country | iEaEee 108t HaratE G it i ¢ ofore ; weame | ciation. 1 ther dvama does the g of | the pretticst Valenciennes lace and most > order for which was issued a few days | Festore great ey ntry action was that_the elderly bridegroom ve- | fine pictures, but T hope it is not truo before th B talliho grma) ifSa RHE L B0 SR SRt SEEREON 16 French neediewrought embroidery s | the order for which was issued few days | wholly wpon the fort fora market in which o | farned 1o tho city this morning and_ 1mado | thatawhen you nre ab s party ob i your old stor "he Knitting Lesson,” ¢Butter- | inner loveliness so exquisitely combine with | o 005 construetion, since, to take effect when other accommoda- | dispose of its products of every description. application through Attorney Wells to have L ) MRS l T Tt Making”” and “‘November, a Remembrance of | the grace of the outer beauty, as it does in | = "ttt B S 0 Dlace of work in a | tious can be provided for the troops. It is | Ixcept for this resource therd would beno | fhe mariage annulled. He stated that a band ‘f"'“p“‘l"““, Aol ‘l“." Yol of Tt l"v‘fl',"','y rent war-cloud broke and deluged | those brief, mystic moments at Nuzareth. It | qown-town building, a mun who finds his | true that the latter part of the order makes U z poultry yard. | of White Caps visited his home_last night :\mix:-nl.\“‘-l n‘v‘(ll“uuw or silly chatter A LA TS st e withSris | is not, therefore, surprising that art scized | tusk a source of pleasure as well us of profit, | uncertain the time when an institution which how colitbiyy whero farming lsiyeb | and/ordered ihm o fleaver his ehlldl wisror [ AN CIOUONOSUNE o oo P tervified family to that belo Normand upon it 5o carly and has clung to it so per- | says a Boston exchange. If you leave your | s the pride of all onr paople and the mainten- | I ur' hot &Lm:'.":)}"n:|:xr.|n iIX; .-.ufl:vr\!u‘('m!s:-q\lmw k i 4 it ‘h.‘~]‘|m~l| ;ml A n‘““h Mliole noand) remote and tranquil, where his mother had | sistently. The very elements of that sceno '\".‘,mhf!:..'-"» Thoston, O | anco of many, is to bo taken from us. But | which, however, from natural causes, the | Falseto his party, false o his wife, so | B W0 U AR R Y o e most uns sung him lullabys while Waterloo was being | oxplain” its place in pinting, as in poetr e T i the Tore | this uncertainty makes the situation only the | climate seems fo be undergoing an aunual | {hinks Miss Tucy Miller of Quance townsiib, 3 £eR%, o0 the world. but ho must nos lost and won, With the return of peace and ARl nCE allanide. 1 A A oL 3 ¢ = 7 ey S change for the better. and it would seem th who broke her engagement with Mr. Walter | selfish givl'in the world, the reconstriction of France tho Millots st~ | YHdnight, silence, pe nd puril of sticks and plumes, who can fit in a fresh | more paiuful and the ore damaging to the | yhuhEe for the hetter, J. Wood, because he accepted the nomination | show his own. selfishness by expecting tled back in Barbizon. But his coun need and God's love; a radiant angel and a | bit of lacc or satin with exqisite accuracy, | interests of the town. The population is not Gyt U s > and SUPpOE Whey | and was eclected “assessoron the farmers' | vou to devote your evenings exclusive Uhack | modest maiden; a fact, a mystery, and a | and who has stories to tell of the fans th by any moans dopendditor axistoncay upon ] ticket, ilo, ‘Tex., dispateh. | {0 him, jgnorlig those who are at home, Iosses and humiliations-proved the fi e s ispensable o the wol. | Hkel o e iepaten. to an exhausted frame, Helived on till_the | symbol forever. hom vt ‘ancess and Tavget sometimies fo | (2 fort. 'This particalar section of the coun- | far and prosperity of a widespread, strug- | {13 1S L oo Ergers. The says tho L. Fome Journall et Hint ¢ belfry | of the indolent, way of carrying figw EX'S BANBONME) “They | you are going to become—a friend. He loved,” | i3 your sweetheart, yourlover, it is true, are: their | it hecause to vou' ‘his heart seems best worth having, his love the richest gift | you can possess, you will not vulgarize, many givls do, the tio that binds you. 1 recently. s of the only girls 1 eve plicd, “and those: clippis o Notices.” ven's office in Madison, Tnd., 1 not think the post would suddenly be aban- 1, It would be littlo short of i calamity | to this sect ak up tho post just now A. Pease, the newly clected mayor of the city and déaler in limber and implements, | was'the scene of a matvimonial freake, o Should the garrison be at once taken | \Vashburn, aged seventy, and Ellen M. Jo D nity it would entail los: wod fourteen years, united in 1 It is true you go with him alone to hear many yearsof prosperity would b The stray feature of tho tr some wonderful music or look at some n-of Nebraska to b ial to Tur for aweek -lhv ac uncertain ys o Shelby: an ardent 1i e ot T8, as | s oxpressod in the legend of tho famous “An- | “Upiic oot fad of tho American fashionuble | extent on account of the untrue reports of | We I’ Miles, ‘Attorney: Nothing has con- Clevs ondorsed - ~iindefinitely post- . dear five minutes when ho cun speak to That | destitution seattered far and wide by some :,‘f‘z’,“‘(',‘:fl more to smooth off the rough edges | bed: | half dozen sympathetic old ladies and a | of th te than the money left here b & full length photoeraph | couplo of preachers living at Potter, | United States troops. T caleulate that they I While on the. hpposite | is still tolevably prosperous a new | leave aunually in the nelghborhood of & turned, and he was ready He had given to |y i n avtistio greangement of the ma. | and a3 yet undeveloped wostern | pay dmong the people of this v DN Ntas sthrtedonsa brlatitott. uch to !’ ARG ) he i g i g @ I i ) ! 1 Blanchard and Rec 3 qUAINLANCE, ANCITIOY 001 26 e him feel 1 he must give up all his Bt thby wero not to Lo he could bestow of | terials which had composed the bridal toilet— | country. But itis without question & fact | of the United States land ofties hayo b | At Hope, forty miles away, the professor £ ! thirough Docomber looking straiight on ty tho | spiritual purity and visibl® beauty. But | satin and Jace, with oven stray orungo blos- | (nat muny of the leading business ents dents of Sidney 5 vo | thought of some meglected business at ‘Tex- nds for you: don’t accopt vuluable 1o ember looking straight on to the | spivitual purity and I3 beauty that many ,n!.. leading business enterp idents of Sidney within the past ol @ 0 = presents from him, and don’t assume an | you, when he ean kiss you on the lips that he knows are only the gates to i, dispatch, He was v sweet, pure speech, and when he can ied to_ the daughter of Benjamin Ward, | whisper the lovely nothings that mean ominent citizen, after a very short ac- | g0 mueh to you both. ‘Then, too, don’t Wiy the mind within'wis aliye and v nunciation” in Florence, the tradition repre- aid to bo o “eostumo album with'great projects, never to be realized, 1t | senting, no doubt, a sentiment vather 1 known New York lady is desc seemed to himthat he had done x\nthm;z than an event. The artist, says the grace- | On the first ot, nothing, he ropeated, nothing. Hiilold tale) kHadi complated (il Dat |lcHithoowne the face of the Madonna, itentiom GHe cedingly hard times in this sc Rector has lost his bride, s: Ay end, and _feeling that a had | there he pansed: nis best conceptions failed | soms and deftly painted heve und there, The | o1 tence only hecause of tho | months, but both ‘are earnestly protesting | arkana, and, leaving his wifo been confided to him, and he had not fully de- 3 e L TS S | o b i go S in a weiltitting | pF IO e CaLIa0 O s hingthnbhadon madibel st arb e & to trandact it. There he got drunk and spent | aiv of proprictorship with him, Tell him livered it! But, as tisual, ho would sum up | WP ; " ‘.'”'qh‘,l,‘l"\_ ;I‘\'I"::x;‘wh,‘_‘;::: ih oY DS pailorn X ¢ juston the point | ot annually distabuted Rt | dtind are using thei Influenies to prevent the | his last eent. The girl returned home. | nothing about your family affairs, for all by saing: - HGol s 'good. His will s [ ¥ireln. Orush e voL that T hin nf b | of starting on o hone 8 liGr MO G EtRIEon ‘it in town, | Tmoval of troops as loug as it is possible to | When the professor gt sobor cnough he | the scerets of thie houschold do not oven hest.” And o surely must he have found it | ity, he humb yod thag tho hand of somo 4 R D E EoRa oY e s for miles | keep them here wrote a note to his spouse as follows belong to the man you are going to to be, when o went bayond, out into the | Worthier artist might be endowed with the D ] op th e o Do rea th D n S okie T Ploase t ) " great vest, in the Jonuary of His voo | saered power lacking to his own. ' He re- SINGULARITIES. avound the city—fov ihe fc ords o market | “In a shout time,” sald 2, McLornon,alead- | -t S Oth R i 46 L marry, Guard yourself in word and "R B e O iy 19 | Solved so to leave his picture us a confession for an immense amount of farm_and garden | g merchint of the cit y in two or throe | WACKS Ao iy COUMCE TS deed; hold his love in the best way pos- ot Tonen, T th i it | tht s sublot s byl NV | mo oy of WY g, ol e o, Hign s bl it b | At LU i D SR | OSSN Whtto sttty and | sl o B iy to you with tho' ue “hat Sontont the kit A and for sorrow and weariness he sle out fishing in a small creck recenily, when [ iness men of Sidney should con e ¥ 0 g1y 2 e S Ty 3 avor lo o eate ity Contnt the, Tean rancors | Tuon | A1 108 ¥6rs o0 Ingaahailensllousaningbiafanalltorol tocottly et e ol o shoananall of tho town. T botievo | Tam wherw you found me, Yo may suceced |1Mm|; of Ilm|ul. ululeu ver lot ln ||‘ caten e . P aapsanga, and Wit o1o- | sunlightiawolko hinj sed his o sturgeon. It was taken to town and scaled [ t0 them. Alveady they have given up idle | pitiofhosqpatisiure insinuule, y ouE Ul hebsouciiuectimo inwny by that I UGRIGs ADIdLa OV NG e e L e | shavoin R iovalT Ra i b R diseussion and have setiled down to work with | feelitiz the effects ard times more | any more. Tintend to stick to dud. many 1oving ties and who is called thyself, carnest and ste U spirit, now g5 | face he had feared to delineate, tr A man named Catoni, n giant above seven | & determination to secure the delaying of. the | now than they, ever havo before or probably - farity. near future. All we | THE WORLD OF AIR. WOMEN % S seof lifo for the fort, —_— The Tomato P 2 v noth- | An Able Eastern Editor Discusses the Waitten for T'he Iice. Today the corvespondent of Tup Ber talked | iug to say. | AR e 4 T said unto my wife one du to many of the most prominent wmen in the | Joseph Oberfelder, clothing merchant and Jousting ataWidoye s “My mother used to mako 4 wticularly those. whose Iuterests will | 0Wner of considerable property in the county, This letter from a widow of New Je Delicious pude luscious pie, Aot said in regard to the proposed abandonment? | oo bionounds a very interesting ques final order of abandonwient if theré isany pos- | Will again in'the ver sibility of the thing being accomplished. And | Want is a little longer'l f Just now the prospeets are bright. | then they can take it and we will have ot, by the very angel who best | feet high and proportionat stout, with an spect” that faco Lad worn when | ¢ mous head, has just died in Ttaly. Be death he sold his skeleton to the anatomi- ‘Modern Painters,” | cal museum at Rome for & uently or i sy S Miss Alico Ell han ¢ onty-three y l bto rest and @ beauty oud {hought, | doubted ngat that humble” grave we scem to | Knew the u hear the very words that Longfellow speaks | the fiv beside Albert Durer’s tomb: druskin . it s the inscription on the tomb- | mare exquisitely O T S that of the annun s, No subject. has been more fre reated And most deli suffer most in the e most, perfoct 1'a , but departed, for the artist ry 1 mentia, swallows small penknife with the ving 5 o 4 ) The “Per] 5 nobody ould feel the effect f D! Do s ot it b1t has besaloironiby 3 rying out of the order of ubandonment. ‘The s would feel the effects of | 5 : S YOLY AN Ifyou but knew her art, uever dic R0 Qe N RS, o, i een, s Wost | Dlades open. Sa far she s experienced 1o | sintiment of the whole town is voiced in these | the abandonment more than our firm, Lknow | tion, says the New York Sun: i*d have a thing [ valie high y arAngleoigandiby himis U | unpleasant “results, but her physician s s ot AR that the post. is # benefit 1o our business by | Tam a widow. My husband has been dead "Dis nothing more nor less than this— The Angelus in Histor) fn tho Ao S MR watching the case with great anxiety, who is @ he thousands of dollars every year, and 1 belie thirteen months, A gentleman of high stand- A green tomato pie.” The Angelus in his that the remo or Alof the garvison would, handonment of ing, independent position and most honorable and, @ llama or Peruvian | proper Irous chanter of the dates from the [ ““Dante, stern but chiv At Gl ek oMt TiiIe a {Goanal) AT thab |l zroatraon e L habL et Ol v ve bivth toagiraffe, greatly to-the | Sidhey now would be of incaleulable damage | this time, prove a_greater blow to the busi- | reputation, whom 1 have known personally Next day, when at my noontide meal pencil has borrowed or pon interpreted from | saluting the “Donna Gentil' Nel Ciel,” to Sof the attendants, The baby givaffe town. Real estate would depreciate ness anen ol the town than did the bank fail- | for many years, desives te pay me his ad- 1 saw my wifo retire oilihag LA taERtad Lo e e e Tt wis ublo to see i fow ninutes after birth, in'value, and_storerooms now filled immer. I our protests sent to our | drosses with a View to murriuge, and has Tuto & closet neav at hand, this seene must ever rank below the exqu Mison (B XTI o atindest to. ¢ the manager fully expects o be able shortly would within a month be without 5 in congress or printed in T | frankly usked permission to do so. I it Close to, the kitchen fire, poem of the evangile itself, beginning wi angelus when ho describes Mary as .”mL o exhibit it as the first gieaffe born in Eng- | ocenp: 1 beral use of our money, will [ proper for me to consent? Or does he display And, coming out with smiling face the verse that tells how an angel of the Lord | fair flower, whom daily T salute at morn and | land. County Iveasurer Tekes—Tt is my opinion on of the war department for | a lack of courtesy and good manncrs in niak- ~And joy-beams in her eye, was sent to a virgin, and hev name was Mary, | eve.” In the “Purgatorio” (B, X.) v | A family living near La Grange, forty miles | that western Nebraska, though comparativ thothingmustibotone, ingisucliadyances'sosoon aftor myhusbandia Sho on the table proudiy placed and following the Mhythmic drama down to | has ereated a tonder but startling reprosenta- | from Louisville, Ky are sick with what the | insianificant from u political standy Judge Heist, County Attorney I deatht A green tomato pie, Sii artion of | Troguitz, Postmaster Breiman, County - ¢ : henetit of a portion of Alccsp, ex-County Judge Shum Under the conventional rule of socicty She et it into equal parts, themselves in the | 0 widow may marey again o year Divided it avound, rding the ahandon- | the death of her husband, That im- And, gazing on me, thought that shp at a time when Nt will | plies, of course, that she may be wooed 'w happiness had found; —* sooncr, and how much sooner depends But, lackuday! 1 hesitato on the state of ner heart. It may hap- Srlltharasoniahys oo pen, and it often does happen, that the A Broo tamato nlo profundity of her grief and the ? ‘tornado poisoning,” and one of | justly entitled to the ious | the moncy spent by the government in main- aty posts, Our peoplo ure | dozen othors all exy t hips while developing a | Strongest language v v which will soon contr s | ment of l'flll"r Sidn 1eh i o ng country A «eived here today by the editor of the Journal from Mr, D¢ states that he A gt A 3 11 tion of the annunciation. He'supposes this | doctors call its sublime ending: “Behold the handmaid | (ooo \which every artist of his day portrayed | the vietims died and. tw of the Lord! Be it dono tomo according to | to he reproduced in marble, amid the expia- | condition, The thy word! Aud the angel departed from flames, for_the consolation of the aton- | germs of the dis her.? souls, I discovered that all the bank | tornado from some i “Tho Roman Catholic custom of perpotually | arvund was marblo white, and most exetly | hundreds of miles away H DR 4 L ¥ | thero was seulptured tho ‘angel who came to A well-daveloped calf: baving. commemeraing this seeno by threo duly | 1 e el Tl dvelorallon taviae atetdiilng Ave Marias" stretches back so far, in its us, in tho act of Sweet sulute, 50 | el Fourof the logs protruded from tho | obtain f ) are in & preci i ans claim that the | taini ere borne on the late | enduring g ed district, probably | new count proportion to the wealth of the common- istinet | wealth. No people are in justice bette titled to the assistane present bm the location ul the fort in Sidne simplest form, that no date can be ussigned | chiselled o the lifo that you had sworn ho | Wanal parts of the hody: with {he fwo. ex! C. D, Bssig, Huardware Merchant—1 dor't | has sceured a promise from the secretary of | VeT) L) ! 4 sy tots origin, But there s historical Intorost | Was saying, Fail 9 Ho fhei doscribes tho | Anpeniases abont nidaay botween the fors | Suppose T seli 810 worlh of poods 1o the peaplo | War ‘that the post shall noi. be abandoned deptiofhepiinohmen ot ol oskrons Ri0a DOl 0, in noting, along the line of the centuries from virgin: “In hor attitude, s seal on | and hind logs. Otherwise, save that the tail | it the gaveison in the cour: hutih theeampiotion oLEor Ompha, SaEaRapBRQUUREIY GRUBROY INGRIQ RN Cako mato fram soft und pinstle mud & AR T | wax i o was imaged the word, ‘Behold | was a little awry, the calt’ was remarkably | business would certainly fecl the SR gl domonstrations - of tion, Ior AL ot At mag ] the middle ages to our own d how | the handmaid of the Lord ! ! well formed and developed, 7 | should go. 1 thiuk every man in the city, CONNUBIALITI wounded spirit craves sympathy and Binan Ty AvenbtL ey mr il this aucient practice shaped itsclf into its priove: refors to th ily ha trunk of o xosa bhah grow what \n ocenpation® is benetiitted saifg consolation, and in her loneliness and ince thib eventinl day, my wite en- o Will whimper, blush and ¢ /o1 $horo mby be rooks ahend i despuiv she fecls the need of a Wi sl R ol em of the th , indir present aspect. It is somewhat remarkable | angelus, in the v, at least, by s said to bo three feet in thateacn development forms a land mark for [ ouly the widow’s little sou trained to piety, hidito o heo/togk 4 | ) 100 of the troops her © with moi rhtan strong ar " | - 3 of l"““l"' As him was tanght, to kneel adown and say, RS ey 1 thoush e than's | T fail to sce how the government will better Sy u'l_“ At Dt nfte J rustin ears ipon which 0 . IDGAT THORNS, The “Scraphic doctor,” St n.m‘..\-mmn-p, AN O M A s A o Roath OB i Wa Y. ovor i luttice woul, and though more thin & | jisclf, or the troops, cither, for that matter, £ Fony n after! weeds, her: downeast eyes, — - : one of the greatest theologians of the church, Milton could find no allusion mor OB A e 5 i JIAVE (i ; “";“I"‘l‘ " by making the change, jere §8 no. more Neighbor - Why do you wish your husband gentle sorrow, patient suffering ‘and The Music of the Futu was by birtha Tuscan, There is an apposites | when he ¢ ibes onr fivst mothe covers i spase of about twelve hundred | oigi1y jecessible point from all parts of the | to join‘a lodge bt AVife It will make | aititude of dependence makes a powerful N p hat functic v i 208 ok 4 square feet, It yields thousands of flowers me happi shbor—In what way? Wifo I 1 No matter what function music may be ness in the link that binds the poetic devo- | unfallen, receiving Raphael, than the adliary 10 country than this. In case the soldiers were l at way ! appeal to every manly breast, especially | called upon to perform, whether it be to ap- on y By giving nic to complain of. tion of the evening Ave M with this | ence to the * fnless Maid” saluted by needed in any part of the United Stat scholar saint, whose home was the beautiful | briel. The fiest Eve is she M. James Lancaster, a Now York farmer, | qre located on the main line of the Union Pa- Lonesum—Been married a month today, "v]ll‘, l'”, “\\'f“"‘” ‘:M ".'q','“\,l'\},({..::; ;l.l,, .(‘ lr’.‘»f-‘fn‘::\::‘l’14.'42‘,‘.-'::. |1.::“~'|\:‘f;:;.".::xm'.l-'['i‘-:I;.u'.m:‘;g Tuseany of Dante, Petrarch, Giotto, Iva S TR AT AT killed un unusually large haw X d ifie and could be forwarded to their destina- | haven't you, old felt Still billingand cooingz, [ WIGOW 18 aliviys, inic ng, » | to heighten and idealizo the ‘expression’ of Angalico and Michacl Augelo, ' St. Bonuven- Restowed the holy silitution u and brought it in to M - Taliufervo, who, | tion wit loss of timo, Then, | supposel ' Scrugo (dubiously)—T am not | absolutely irvesistible, Iiven the love- | 10 NIRRT WECH PequEe DI AMETEREION. B0 turo is, by tho way, the dogmatic writer from FARGURE IR in preparing to prese its natural form, 10 cheaper or healthier | cooing as much as I was at one time, but the | liest of maidens may well look upon hew | e ia S G he contrary to every known, whom Dante borrowed entive is finest passages | The subject might carr and wide, | found four suakes'in its craw. One was two wnee of agarrison, Pro- | billing—ah, me! as a dangevous rival, though she enters | 1w o' nature for it to relinguish any I on the divine nature, und its manifestations | among the pictures of muny and the | feet loug, another fifteen inches, and still an- [ Visions of all kinds not furnished by the goy- More bridal conples ave szid to have visited | into no formal competition with them, | ple of organic structuro that has it “An. | other six in : X os long. One had 1ost its head | spmment arc But time | in thed , nll . stive mill, and anoth in the universe. These two compatriots were | poems of many to abundunt ind casily ol called rospect . “the theol cglus Domini“Nungiavit Mar able. | Washington this spring thun ever before. | and invites tender reg was con Judgo Neubaner uigintained that while | One of the hotels u ) vd by reason of | evolved f s wpresent of a | the churm of her widowhood only. rdunce n its own sub: oand in ac- with its own laws. This or that Mary,” and “the poet of M It was & and space recall our wandering steps to the [ siderably mutilated. — Evidently they had | these points were of importance the main con- | bouquet to each bride that enters 1t8 dining A e 3 ticul v 1 form may become extinct Bonaventure, who, when suporior general of | canvas of Millet, Before it we pause to hear | been but veceutly swallowed. sideration with the peoplo of Sidney should ,.,,.,,,‘,v A ol T A P T T A A 1,[1"“ soon ';"" her be .!:‘I‘ mnent ""‘ ‘l" P ALl e ,,‘.“ vl aud tho Francisean order, decreed that in all the 21ls, With whose very musie the | A gentleman from Jonesboro was at tho [ be the distribution'of ready money among all | heen enormous, ovidences of how power will bring a feels | Lo oins S0 elofor existence, and only the couvents u bell should ring at the sunset | believing painter strove to fill his utmosphere, | capitol at Atlanta, Ga., and told Mv. Briseoo | classes of people, both in the town and in the | e take pleasure in announcing the en. | 1P€ 0f pleasure to the mourning heavt of | FHEEs TEECREET,IG SERCIEO SR On HNS 1 the friars to | When his pic was completed he led up to | of the railvond commission u queer story, H and | it one of his £ nds who had seon and heard [ claims that in Jonesboro a baby was born on. | nothing of the wor After a moment's | last week which has four legs and feet, four hour, giving a signal for i wherever they might chance to b sy three ayes in honor of the incarna country, in a time when monay is the hardest | garomont of Sam ing ou earth to get hold of. “If u farmer | FRASHOROT P id the ju y on cireum- j oy gy tomorro 0 But the grea nent. Some | musical form and wanism of may trust the t principal of 0 sort 8 son of the hne and Miss Le says a California sympathy of the entive com- | people rebound u widow, depends probat stance nlul her tempe aload of wood to towr r than others, In | eternal; and, if ! . s and ) change, Th gory 1X., the reigning pontiff, was then | silence Millet asked his companion : arms and hands and a pair of wings on its Lit at the post for cash. Its the | o\ B o e ey ety i e restoring | past, the eyolution of the future ¢ in"his famous contest with the [ “\Well, what is it(" shoulders, Tho gentleman vouched for the | same with his butter, eggs, poultey, nity'is extondsd to tha ysung ady nlier | one/onsa the ‘an gonehle) of forng Tty Uho orolation of bhe Siingavil ah s or any- | deon ufictio slasticity e unstrung het M tor aote, Crhesa | 4e0P afliction elasticity to the unstrung heart m Turks and with Frederick 11 Approvihg of “Why, the ‘Angelus ' veplied the visitor | truth of the story, and said that it was still | thi; dlse of the kind § highly orgunized forims, Just as the lack of the evening ave ordained for the Franciscan | conclusively, “One can hear the bell alive and when he saw it it was yelling items don’t appearto @mo) 0 muc n A Kunsas woman presents the strange ano- | close at hand, and in another he may be 3 x . HOI hu.fn:-‘n‘lulh'lmm.mmm. SR “Then, I've suc ed (" cried the t | lustily as any ordinary two-legged, two-armed :‘Iu-'\l n{ .llll‘.ll;.l'll I(l‘r-.nl vty :.m'.':v\ »1l'u|! "W | maly of being the logal wife of two husbauas: | Jong in coming. Mere concern for con- | M '”-“Iv sl i 4 |‘l lllv ‘u‘y:f‘ “l\‘\-l.l:ms‘!:: all tho faithful, desiving these prayers to be | painter joyfully. “Atlast Ihave mude my- | and wingless infant. N Mrs Allen, “of Ossawatomio, was divoreed | venfionality misy lead one widow tostifle | FARPICSIUVO was sgon folt to be u weakuens offered for tho peace of Christendom. Hofore selt understood - ; T e A aat 1 athan e | R o niel pamniaatanandatatad '(:::1;‘;.(]';; n"ll’.";::'v and marricd 10 a M | 10 now a R G oo ma L h NS hixih | AUk HOE S - BARERS AL ALSRESh: 1D LHATIEY 1.’;::\:“‘1-‘:::.::".‘\"\' Iml:“ ‘J}:‘~ du: H\ l‘ll“‘\"':' h:“:. “”1\-‘1"\‘ ll).ll'.lll 'H\‘n‘ me “‘{;lf\ ll"! ‘l:n © | couutries the goat leads long strings of ani- [ that whil “.m“» rty miles from Sido decree of divorce set aside, and now the | While another will tend and cultivate it, | ganism in the Wagneriun music drama be o' fo s spread all over | ¢ r o sl cance of that strong | mals daily to and from the mountains, but it [ he lmows that tho abandonment of the fort [ foerecof divorde sev usife, and uowwhe |5 0000 rvont may be hev self-accusus | found to bow weakiess, and, in time, be cured southern Furope, but was only marked for | light, cast with so striking an effect on the | isin ith Africa that it is regularly kept | would be felt as a loss by the people living in \ N sunset hour, praying peasants. His own brush, guiding | and employed as a leader of flocks of ‘sheep, | his neighborhood husbands In the next century the diocese of saints, in | those rays of light, once explained the motif | Should a blinding storm of rain or hail drive General Morrow, commander of the mili- William y & new formal ion of some sort gner’s famous dictum that cthe compos in lyric drama must remember not to be 0o ¢ bonuet, tion, The feeling of the duty of grief Valley, | for the dead may be more irrvepr: wll buy her spri bs and wife of Ches 1 ssible Franco, asked th guing pope, John XXiL, | of the whole work. While it was still unfin- | the silly s! fore it, or cause them to | tary post, said: *I cannot be interviewed on | Pa., avea heavy couple. Mr. Jacobs weighs | in one than another, and yet the veality | 10/ s e v Py 4 10 gant papal approbation o the adding of | ished, a skeptical friend obsorved, whilo tho | huddlo tomethor in & coruér so s to suitocats | i3 subjset, Tho war department mist. dos inds and bis wifc tips tho beam at 275 | of the mowrning in’ cach muy bo tho | fier it tofounder couhtorapopithogm the noon to the evening aves. The sanction | artist went on working: each other, the trained goat will walke them | termine whether the fort is to be continued are eight children in the family and | gume, N ks Sat N s was readily acconded, and the augmented de- |~ “Millet, do you kuow what that picture | up, and, by a method best known to himself, | ornot. Iam bound by its decision. I bad | each welghs over 200 pounds. Mr. Jacobs' - . bo muslcal onough, A’ certati Glerman oritis™ votion was soon extended over the whole con- s tome! The utter uselessness of prayer! | will induce them to follow him to & place of | not supposed, however, that the post was in mother was a very weighty lady, w \ing ‘When Girls Arve Engaged. onco said that, whatever might Lo thought of tinent, (1818) There stand your man and woman; they” be- | safet dunger of immediato abandonment, There | over 300 pounds. Combined the weight of the littlo band around the | Wagnerho was indisputably the gate through In iho next century we cometo Calixtus | lieve; they pray; they cry to ¢ And 3% St T has just been expended upon it $15,000, and | tamily is considerably over 2,000 pounds, » left hand in whicl HIOL ThA tuLira path of thh Ivri damariats 111, @ poutiff remarkable on many grounds, [ what' good does’itdo themi The picture [ mpove is a b e neis. | Quaiters of oficers and men aro in'first rate | A gay bachelor of Philadelphia has o curi- | § T Lapie Al e Rt B L o R gkl TS EROA. e but! perliaps, most notable as organizing and | answ The bleak fields remaln, sud ere I8 & bronze monument to Chrls: | o) dition, ™ Considering splendid vegetable | ous decoration over his sitting room mantel, | 12 #eb & turquolse, and when it was put | X8, but the lyrio drama must puss through y, aud the dull deadgery-—and | topher Columbus in the City of Mexico) there you remembered that the Hindoo | this gate; stop at it it cannot, expanding the voble work beg y his pre- garden ex lent water supply, healthful- | A large frame is filled with photographs of e - e Geceasor,” Nicholua V., that, nawely, ofthe | the graveyard yonder undor the bella It was erceted twenty > by Mr, | Hoas of climate, rallroad fachitiss, and groat | &ivs and women, most of them ;«.--'le At | said: “*He who hath a turquoise hath q (s reat vatican library, originally a ropository | Millet ° smiled, and went on wi Bscandon, a private cilizen, at & per- | advantages of post to survounding country in | the bottom of each picture 1s pasted a news- | friend. that’s what you have in Dr. Birney, practice limited to catarrhe lor the rury treasures s hed frow the | iug. After & few wowments, be d sonal outluy of 860,000, the way of market 1 pre us, 1 aper clippl Why, Mr. Browt do | the man you 1 best, and whose wifo @l discases of nose and throat. Liee bldg, .