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«We have been busy the last three days cleaning up our basement, and the Dam- aged Goods we found there will @@ PUT ON SALE TO-MORROW. W | Most ‘uf them are much less damaged than those we had upstairs, and which we have already disposed of. ~ Many of them are only slightly touched with water, and most of them have only the very slightest smell of smoke. But the same reductions will be made as before. WE CANNOT ENTER INO PARTICULARS BUT THE GOODS CONSIST ORF Silks, Velvets, Dress Coods, Laces Drapery Nets, Handkerchiefs, Hosiery, Underwear, Challies, Sateens, Linens, Table Cloths, Napkins Towels, Blankets. Mushn Underwear, Cloaks, Jackets, Jerseys, Anda lot of lace curtains which have got wet in the case and will be sold for half price, although not spoiled at all for immediate use. A case of blankets, wet, $3.50 goods, will be sold for $1.50. Two cases of ginghams, some of the pieces slightly wet, will be sold for 5¢. = The price was 10c yard, and two cases 12 1-2¢ Sateens;very et beautiful goods, slightly smoked, will be sold at 6 1-4c. They are in our west window. N.B FAI.CONER. -: N.B FALCONER g HAD A TERRIBLE AUDIENCE. i soou made him famous as for some | time with mathematical accuracy at any rate l (‘ OM 0; E RT vD HOME has about as much use for a husband as for a | was a man of s ith a superb power time organist at the Madeleine, and has long | desired. \l.\ xD p l H ‘A AI\ | white elephant, had a little fun with the | of lm1u||m|.u‘x.l:x?n:'i!t‘ivr.mllb‘- J-'.‘.J"n'.“l-"'(.n'fl.'?‘.f been a distinguished pianist and a keen mu- | MoGinty, so long porseeuted in song, has veportorial inquisitor iu this wise and deserve the attention and. commendatin sical critic been dramatized and his sufferings are now pulits My ideal, ah! he is too awfully lovely for | of the public, and at the samo {ijn possosse In a private letter which has been shown | visible to the naked e anything. He has a tall and slender figure, | of social qualities which inc 4 her pleas- me, he anuounces that he has closed his ca- A Spanish soldier of twent Ideal Suvareigu? Omaha Teachers Would | and dresses with immaculate taste, He ha ure the more he achie! distinction reoras o virtuoso aud for the prosent, at | A Spar i large, mournful, blue eves shuded by long | for himanit . T g named Vauti, has been found 1 Have Govern Them, darkc’ lashes. He has tho thin, delicately | femingos haronemo ihypoctisy, moler. winked at now and then, as much as to say, “All right, old boy, we know—you've been there,” rendered my favoritism among these fellows rather irksowe. Kean Forgot His Lines. | Joo Jofferson's Experience With Ticket-of- During an engagement at Liverpool, Charles manag . - i tralia, 3 i T 4 sl iados oo | least, has avandoned his original intention of {4 I s hi Cidon oy Jactiaxy L Leave-Man in Au Toean noted in the ' Lady of Lyons” three or | viiein o' Ameries under M, Altred Godchaux's | Cienfuegos, who hail ?‘”"“““F‘*‘f,‘,““" L & chiseled nose of a Greek god. A long, silky | catse. 1y hen® clar e o naaiion) K | hree ropresentations the or wa For many years M. Saint-Sacns courted | Which was produced originally iu the Ly RS womanly sensitiveness. His work should all | was el i Wi o milght a i OTHELLO'S. APOLOGY OUT SHORT. | his post regularly, and ull went smoothly; on unpopularity lu Patis by Lin warm dofonse of | Court theater with Wilsoy Hureett and ol MEN NEITHER STICKS NOR MONKEYS, | jomunl Lis agents and ho should spond s | g tie ’l"'l'lfi‘,,'“‘l‘“":""“;::,“‘”’:('vh e g gt 4 tho last night, however, hie was uufartunately | yugnor. He has since tompored. his onthu- fua Modeda in ie minplal dhatactars lins _— thme in his grand old library meditating upon | so, he hud failod i his dros pasado er b eiucy H gallod away. Claude commenced his descuip- | ginm, though there are many signs in his | becn rowritten. : § LAl i " : the influiteness of the whichness of the what | to'other mortals whoso Teception. s ey i A Hundred Lines at One Fell Swoop— | tion, as usual, with the words: works of the influenco of the Bayreuth Lilli Lohman's Norma is described as a [ The Woman Who Idoilzes a Big, Red- | and adoring his adoved with an ador: him to more immediate if less hlisdul'mu(. b RS “Nay, dearest, nay, = prophet. wonderful performence, much wove effective Faced Man and Lady Who is tervifying in its intensity.” munion of soul. ( Mysterious Disappearance ¢ If thou wouldst buve nie paint the— — even, than the characterization of Brunhilde There is in one of the rooms in the Pleasant : Y¥rench Composer—Lester Wal- /At this moment he fixed his eye on the spot Lester Wallack's Grave, and other Wagner heroines. Her action is 5 an Adonis with hool a demuvre little miss to whom some HONEY ¥o . R S e Phero tho prowpter should have been, but | TLester Wallack's gravo lies in an_isolated | said to be superh in its_ art and its varies et o T s, irreverent mortals would apply the adjective 2 R THE LADIES, ACK-:8 Nog found him not. spot on the side of Woodlawn that slopes | and she seems to revel in the vocal ceauties of “cuddlesome.” She has a pretty figure, . dark haic and eyes, and wears the | . The watteau fans might pass for heirviooms, neatest of garments. She gave | theyare so similar to those carvied by oy 2 description of the orthodox ideal man s he | Brandmoth of lace in uutique pattern, ‘ool who hus mentally painted 1o | uppears in the books, and, growing coufl: | With insorted medailions hand. palatad i She has | dential, intimated that ho might be all right | Watteau effects and colors, her own shure of the good looks of the | 08 au ‘ideal, but he was cousiderable of a | A novelty is the Blucher. Tt is made o The Prince of Como paused and tried bacl, saying: If thou wouldst have me palnt— I say—if thou wouldst have me paint tee——" Thon he collapsed utterly, exclaiming audi- bly to Mrs. Kean, who had 'in vain attempted toward the New Haven railroad, where it can | Dellini's musi be secen from the car windows, says the ‘When an audience at a theater in Santi: Dramatic Mirror, de Chili is displeased because of a change in No stone or monument. of any sort marks | the bill it has its own way of exprossing dis- | Dodge s the resting place of our dead prince of come- | pleasure. On # rocent occasion, when the | herown sutisfaction an ideal man, dians, Some withored wreaths aud flowers | play was shortened, tho spectators wrecked | fully There is a molder of youthful ideas in the Having had a long rest from ncting, I re- turned to Melbourne to play a short engago- nent with my former partner at the Hay- suaket, and then salled for Van Diemen's | 8 T n oF strewn on the mound but emphasizes th : or ¥ i ches iccadi i 3 phasizes the | the theater and compelled manager and artists | Giec' is noither @ blond 5 e chestnut, the Piccadilly last which giv at sli G, 0y " sholsy n Bt ‘ R TS, :is neither onde uwor a brune [yt Heian o Sy ) which gives that slim ‘It's nouse, Blien; T'm flummuxed! melancholy sense of loneliness and desertion | to flee for their lives. neither shart nov tall, young nor old, but sho | yor oW What Ilike she continued, “and | offect to the foot now so much soughy st His most ludicrous mishap, nowever, oc- | that the sight inspives, you mustn’t print it for the world, is oue of | in the best grades of fine Wi s in this jeson in the Century for May. Thislovely After Savah Bernhardt appea vhen he was acting Othel- There was loud talk of a statue to W . Land, now called Tasmania, writes Joseph Qlirredin Beltaet: her to [ has a paivof fine, expressive eyes, beautiful | these big, red-faced, two hundred . pound L b formerly been & couvict station, Wallack Rl bbbt ol B ) sligi H05 S9N foampculy (hego England ( lo. He had just heard a_ bogus report of the | in the Central Pari not long after his death, | Shuntry Abbey and Girau will take her to | 118 % DO e, wbuosss handanda slender, | men. Théy have big voices, big hunds and | Mrs. Cleveland is scholarly enough o ve where lifo-sentenced prisoners from Englan ] 0 d Brazil, and a four of the greater part of th I | m ‘ \ understandingly and. o ugh ! M, e foatl of 'Lis intimate fuiond Murray, the | and bofora tho nowspapers and the publichad | Proei 40 5 tour,of Sho grester part of the | A, & white, wellhaper & big hearts.” They stride through the world | Understandingly and - enjoy the English v Dud been sent. There was at tho time I speak | dea ; aud th two continents will bearranged to occupy two | graceful figure, She does not want a hus. | bif orld | oo . ! Edinburgh manager, which somewhat un- | forgotten he once lived. Wouldit not bewell | U 4 i o : : with a laugh on their lips and all the littlo I of, and is now, a most refined socicty in 'as- | hinged him, He got through his first scene | for his family, or Thoodore Moss. or if need LA e : the cognoscenti thag | J2ndand has no intention of getting enc; but Wt 7 ifeave brushed | The sacrifise of widows on the funeral pyre mania, thougll among the lower classes there | without dificulty, but when he camo to the be, the profossion, to place & simple stens { ocid W ISEERSI ATORE o0 copposcent! that for tho u:ms he-vive spocions \\'lhomml away like cobwebs by thelr brawny hunds, | still goos on in Bl ae solory et Py vas 0 strongflavor of the convict clemont. T | apology, lie had barely uttered the first line, | ubove this graves Colo Mad, " which excited so_muclyat- | 20Ve an ouk to cling to she recommends some- | T know they drinle lots of drinks. and are bad | They e burmod o i e gl Jiva, i - in “Money Mad,”" which excited so_mu : in a good ninny ways, but there is nothing | their husbunds, The- Intter i ost potent, grave and reverend signors,” when his memory loft him altogether. He muttered anxiously to me (I was Cassio) : “What is it?" In the innocence of my heart, I responded* “What is what " “The word! The word!"” he replied, “Which word " 1 ingeniously asked. “Why, the word T want " “But,” said I, “I don’t know which word i — 2 T i thing liko the following : : i ) sla Nordica's Beautiful Home. R T R “Hemust bo o man, not a stick nor a | Sl about thom dnd smalluess T despise: | shiare the same fate if ho be of His Mrne,Norioa has a beentihd hteas jngtont spouks Yy Al LeheE i 3 Y hew, you know, to most women it | short time ago thre ’ suid that nogotiations .are about com- | monkey with a cane and an eye-glass, He oo, RAtatARlAn o i rearnen oA Al ¥ 2 2 s bl 0 une:and an oy s S0 % h remated. of London, surroinded s darge gardan, ed with M. Gounod to write grandopera | must haye some brains in bis head and know,| protector is blg enoash anq cronnst ¥ e | © : s the New York World. Whenshe is in | 500 Toto0q fORTEE 10 WIS Erupc opant p 3 & 8! § enengh The servants and mistresses of Vie it she keeps ho eds 1 trims her D be d in Ame h hoif to use them. He must haye money, be- | to elbow his way anywhere, It does not malke g e ienna 2u:6he Seeep h veeds and trims her | yipgelf ssuperintend its production and con- ! . 4 i i i © to manage their affuivs under the supe Hower-heds, entertaius company, hunts, vides, | duet in porson on tho frst night. Do sceuos | CWUSe L I8 1ot a man among men in this age | 80 much difference dbout his brains so long as intendence of the police. Tho latter k satls und plays tennis, Bho Las trophies from | or'tho'siet sacond and fourth sets wve suid to | Of the world unless ho has, He must hayo | Be 8ot afool. I don't want himtobo o Sservants’ book” in which cach gir he has ever sung in, and the fit- | {.)iG 0 at the time of the Montezu- | position and independence sals and re-engagemems are 1 s house ave filled with bric-a-brac gother with acted “The Ticket-of-Leave-Man” for tho first time in Hobart Town, and there was wmuch excitement in the city when the play was announced. At least one hundred ticket- of-leave men were in the piton the first night f its production. Before the curtain rose, T foukcdlhmugh itat this terrible audience; nlc wives of a chief w e ¥ | philosopher nor a poet nor & musician, but 1 aud - nerve. | yealiy would like him to know how to drive tho faces i the pit werea study. Men with tings of L ¢ foreheads aud small, pecring eyes, ferret- | you do want!” ' Mrs. Kean and the promptor RIS & y d mas, aud that of the thivd in the wost. He must carry the purse himself [ horses and train dogs. Something like fho oples of character Jow forehead ¥ g ey I and ornaments, the gifts of admirers and 3 e AR e coy \g each employe: omo with flat noses and square. | both suw- something was wrong, und they | fifenda "Sie s tie piunos in her house, | | The composer Arrigo Bolto will bring out | and not bother -his wife with | typicul English 'squive, T think, 15 about my & ‘h“ s 2 y i Some lisse fans have sf Rooking eyes, oruel juws, aud sinister expressions—leering, g low and cunning—all wearing s sullen,dogged Jooked, as though they would tear the each tried to prompt him from the wings, but in vain. At last & luminous idea occurréd to me, I whispered him the last lino of the Apology; he accepted the suggestion, and Lis opera, *Nerone,” next year at, Lo Scala. | i g et i ideal,” s of carved wood fay; He has lafelyfinished alibretto, *Maometto, [ 1S kol o o o sizniatio vizwiia fakaa Do ot o | eoloratShbnat aaitin lisse, and a fringo SIC AND THE DRAMA which he himself set to music. it an faust o polite and attentive 0 | yoachers of the high school, Naturo never | pendant metallicbeads along eneh ford. s 4 DRANA, Hoicldieu’s opera, “The Caliph of Bagdad,” | his wife, and in public and at_home troat her | intondod her for 5 * s be is fur [ have very full, nwrrow ruchings of fine each of which she uses e ches from the pit and gut the theater of | boldly cutting out a hundred lines or ‘more x 3 the overture to which was once a universal | as any gentleman would a lady, ~ But, above | too bright, rosy and alfogether interesting, | plaited lisse along the folds, giving a very gt ciorphi b phainic g up to | ‘‘in one fell swoop''—he exclaimed : W. J. Scanlan will make a forty-fivewee favorite, was lately revived at tho Breshau | aul things, he must not be a ‘softy. He must [ She has blonde hair and wears all the flowers | feathery and dainty effe Ate scenery 1 the stage, 'This shows the | . “Here cames the lady—let her witness jt!” | tour next season. Stadt theater, and received with much favor, | attend to bis business and not make a Miss | she can get, She says: The prettiest feet on record were those of orn upon the stage. s WYhereupon, the eutrunce of the gentlo Des- | Marie Hilforde will probubly blossom out | ~ Alice King Livingston retires from the | Motly of himselt by interfering with the | “Anything with the least semblance of | Napoleon's sister, the Princess Borghese, wiio !: of the drama. An author misht | gemona got'us out of our diffoulty as a star next season. “Lord Chumley company to prepare for u | housdnor the williner's bills, - He should be | manhood is supposed to be the schoolma'am’s | afttr her bath, usod to recline cefully'on site an acticle abusing them, oe an artist | - Yoeaw afterward, when ho played Walsey | Stuart Robson will spend his summer va. | st aGLiumley” compauy ta higan and the | 80 self-veliant, so velinble and so much of a | ideal, isn't it? Well, it doosn't make so much | lounge in her dressing room, with. her 4o paiut a picture showing up tho hidcous de- | in his maguificent revival of “Henry VIIL? | cation in Cohasset, Mass. Lake Superior country. . Priox to this und man thut he might remain at home or go | diffevenc all. If I map ont my journey [ utive feet, plump and perfect.as those of u gormity of their features—all this they could :Al the l’l'lllm i lm:fla:mu 1‘ more fl""l]: Ber | Robert Mantell expects to makea brief | taking she will produce Mr. W, C ll.u\(..uu- ay ml:]ll l(w I:)I[:;l\l "-i!:lll f'!.‘x"\”.'? m‘ l‘!.::‘x'; llw :};mnlml:i vosrem lvillul‘lj companiou \;‘\:(l:? ;;)luhl.luml tinted like a tea rose, cavefully dis- A AR Sergadon oip | Yousness than ho hiad ever done, and it was | (i 05 MAREL SXPects v i k G t s and would ulways e 0 8 Auguste van Ty o E‘: und even Laugh at; bubput ono of thelt | )laged (thougeh T canniot, voueh for it from TR BUERe MBI 8 s T et Smatation o IR nbvl, U4 probably [ ber the sumo-—an elegunt, well groomed, well | who — poctizes and * vhapsodizes and he swagger girl is advancing. There is upon the stage in human form,surrounded |y own personul kuowledge) that two young nraBurt has g B e O A vt poised and we nluted gentloman.” vus _and all - that, “the chances | nothing more cortain than her nielval She by the sympathetic story of a play, and they | givls, who followed as pages in bis train wero Bluebéurd d Y oz Mgl Sarah Bernhardt is to play “Joan of Ave, | It the sume school there is a young lady that T will some time find myselt linked | wiil come with the chamois brows spats on illy taught the words of Wolsey, so W. 8. Gilbert is bAck again in England = - bo | With a snap iu her eyes and a fieniness in her clod who swins up the good of life | hor low shoes, a pork pie perched on the sic care that in the event of his breaking down they might prompt him, svould no more submit to an ill-usage of him $han they would to a personal attack upon in London, and certuin alteratic L made in thie dialogue and action of aed her man- | Six stalwart Englishmen will no il lins whicl must indicate something to the | under the heads of ¢ . ting, drinking wife-hunter who has o different idezl. She | and sleepin I have an ideal, but from Iudia. Agues Herndon has disch smoking | of her head, n four-in-hand tied about he AW ot | choker and ornamented with o mastift sca ghemselves, ager, who is also her husband, and is adver. says: the remotest idea that e ever lived or ever i - ——— age s aly id, s adver- | ik rushes before the seythe- b pin and ber thumbs in the pockets of sum The first act. of the play progressed with 4 - tising for some one to look aftér her business i i i ol 1 ute goody-goody men. T hate dignified, | willlive. He is perfectly honest, trustworthy | i tines or Success remal 2 A Vanished Composer. the pullunt, mald aud tho, paltroouor straight-laced old sticks and 1 hate we and constaut, He is néither o namby Tos Uinaer. Har suooess remalus to be. soon affairs next season But little excitement. These men seemed to sem to have been The lace boot is again reinstated in fay ‘ the humorous and pathetio side of the ey With great relish; but when [ came island bulldogs (they would s The mysterious disappearance of M. Camille & iy ARy ldoy “ minded, driveling idiots who can’t look atca | Miss Molty nor a thick-headed brute. SaTap SRS ARDOSERDOR s b, O Mary Auderson’s intimate London friends | toy terviers in those days) will have its pro- beer sign without getting drunk. 1 swant i | take o deiic 1f ho foels Jeots et 1 i | but it comos back in & more ornamental foem In some instanc claim to have s the frouts a ived positive informution | por from the onsgshorn a little, 4 0 of pateut dy herself that, although she will I'he name of the great tenor Gayarre wi cut in scallops, and the silken laces concerns that eminent wan who can keep himself and his wi far above his appetites and passions as to 1 leather, pon the stage in the second act, revealing | New York Herald. He left Par Fomm tho’ E A MRS Bhow f A without borrowing money or buying furniture | lead people o thiftk that he his none. . Dliys. JE%; 004 11 4o : | he empelated features of returned convict, | fore the production of his last lyric drama, {h:f‘;l'.l'gf,_ 9 husband, 8ho“will not abandon Jot soon be forgotten inSpain. A new theo- | oy the installment plaw, © 1 want him to take | ioally ho s perfoct, His breath boveat T some bright color, as scarlet or yelloyw “Ascanio,” at the Grand opera, aud, though ter is about to be opened atcBarcelona, which | 4 'qrink whon he foels like it, smoke n cigar | tecth are white, his nails are clean and well The most fashionable London shoes for Ath sunken eyes and a closely shaved head, Ahere was @ painful stillness in the house, ons are in silk, sudde o gowns, with Alexander Salvini be ) ' willbe called the Theater Guyarre; while [ Whon he avants one. anc o el et AL A BACLS 60 Cloan i B R Bl stay 198t week, AOUAR it when he wants one and if he fecls like it | trimmed, and his linen is spoticss. He is next month another, beuriug the” same name, | §iavo a time' with his friends, T swant i to her banctimonious nor vulgar nor pro. | Morocco, corvesponding with the it is rumoved that he bas since been heard of in Venice, nothing defivite is kuown of his he wholo pit_scomed toloan forward and | movements, According to one rumor he is | and “Don Cwesar de Buz Jrill be opencd at Las Palinas, on the Canary | nayoa bank account big enough 10.buy new | fane thoues 1 ihim tord b sceasions when | contrasting heels and rands, and either riy teain their eager eyes upon the scene, and | wanderiug about in the far cast. Another Corinne may possibly bring out a new | Isles. clothes for emergency occasions and 1 dou't | forcible expressions are to some extent justi- | bon tying the sides flaps together on the in Bob Brierly revealed to his sweotheart the | port locates him in & quiet nook near Par burlesque next season in addition to “Monte | ~Aunie Pixley says it i mot an easy thing | want him 1o spend eue 'y minute he isnotat | fiable, He may have genius, but he must | 5tep on a hundsome buckle, igocrots of the prison house,” there was | According to a third story heisin a private | Cristo, jr., _nnd readia. to get new songs suitable for singing in pub- | work in dawdling around the house,” nuot be 4 crank. He must have refinement Siuce gold-bead necklaces have again o lunatic asylum, Sam Harrison suys: “The sostenuto and | lic. Out of alarge number of bullads se- [ At Izard school there is a lady from whoso | and caltire. He ki o vor poem or pi into style dealers have been placed very fre rmurs of recognition and shakings y ttle murn g shakings of it and he loves, | quently in a ve her E opean | cheeks the worries'und vexations of several | of music when he hear For'souie time past it has been an open techniquo of Clara Morris' voice are below | cured for her last yoar delicato position whin e head, as though they fully recognized | epet that he has been painfully afflicted by | the ordinary, but her trills in the last act of | agzent, she could makd use of onl one, | terms of struggle with undeveloped minds | ho protects and defends his wife with | some lady came in to complain that the nock e local allusions that thoy s well rewem. | the death of his mother, whom e adoredund | ‘Article 4 are equal o any prima donngs ] | “Love's Old, Sweet Song which 1 Very | has wory the fivst warm blush of youth and | the devotion aud chivalry of w mediwval'| luco.sold her was of infetior quulity. we it . red; deep-drawn sighs for the sufferings | Who had devoted her life to him. His | eyer heard.” popular on both sides of the sea. who is tived to death of the monotonous | kuight. crocked or blackened on her neck.” Recont fi’“ Bob had gone through, dx:(‘p}l}r];l_ ssion Lud boen nu_'re:lsuil b(\:.nl» Borlioss “Beatrice and Benedict, with [ A new star. Marie Hubest Frohman, has o | drone of the schoolroom, the inky fingers and | *Now, fsn't that nice and isn't it impos. | inyestieation et the experience of promi 4 little smothered laughs ¢ | hoaied difcultios with M. Ritt and Gail- | citatives by Felix Mottiwas recently ghoes | now play -The Witeh ayhich pictures life | chalky dresses and the unutterable wearincss | sible. I never met such a man and never ex- | nent storckeepers hus disclosed the fact that on o i urd, the opera managers, in connection with | Fo 5 EER P SRR TERGES b opers and | during the time of the Puritans, and borders | of a duy-in-and-out drudge for daily bread pect to and, conseque this is due entirély to the contact of the beads fmomo of the old, well-remem. | the production of “Ascanio,” and the strain | foF the first tme on tragedy. One of 1ta" kcenes shows ho deal is 4 wooden wan who would love | life of single blesse with & neck upon which face-powder has ered inconveniences of prison life; but then, | upon the composer's mind at lust bacame 50 men and women were put in stocks for ma > how and where | may be till my days u beeu used, The smallest amount of powd This year the general breaking dp of the- trical companies will take place May 10, if the necklace be continually worn, is suf intolerable that in lett vowed he would flee ¥ to his friends he ris bef the fute of her liberty, riches | low leaf. You think 1 v abbath. ing love on tho § Tra Aldridge, the colo ob was & hero, and thelr sympathies wen aught by the nobleness of his character and eans of time to loiter under the trees | some day, Isee. Well, v ficleut to cause this, d man who used to s innocence of crime, ws though each oue of | bis new work was decided, feeling as he did | Still another farce comes has beon | o\ Sthelle (o tu t surope, | soothed by tho ath of the flowy and there is 1o telling what I may do. Certain physiclans have discovered that hese villlans rocognized how persecuted he | hnequal to the excitement of success or | broached. Tne name os it is “Irish Whisky." bt udu.x‘\lglllm-r’t‘m "the st m?&"x',;.f‘l.“{\‘."' and the music of the birds. He may be a | Down at the Pacific schaol, t lic of by- [ feowns “‘.‘..'\{' radit ..u‘.‘f\m .“\.m:‘.‘ i { nd Bob had been failare. ’ Siduoy Booth, sonof Mrs. Agues Booth, | contralto volce, f5he has been at IKroll's | statesman or u brewer, it makos no difteronce | gone duys aud prelistoric architects, is a | hetweon the bridge of the 1056 and the roots M Saint-Sacns is too well known here to | has joined the Nellie McHen ¥ company, theator, Berlin, to sing in opera, and has been | to her o that he surrounds her with music ately maiden, There is u mellowness inher | of the hair, S0 every woman who through need mu » | and beauty, volee, a heartiness in her laugh reason has ncreased. W henover Bob was hounded by a o dosceibing, For ycars past bis | Mme. Patti will carry away with her abont | cast for the pavt of Abamen o S brightuess | frotting. ii-health orans otbs im the play progressed, thelr enthusiasm etoctive, or fll-treated by the old Jew, they | works for organ, for plano and orchestra bave | $250,000, the wages of her season i Afuorics 5 ey £ Ay {A sevious-fuced girl 1o the same building | in her eyoand, withal, a comelinss in hor fuce | quired those Htio winliion on o Lras 4 ould howl their indiguation at the actors; | been famillar in 'the concert room. None of | o000 th : parocly | whoes Siiiceierat kiohmand, near London, | viriks' \hiat e man 15 make an toeal Dassend | i oroand, withal, a com deserve consider, | 3uired those littio wrinklos RHEeR L Corinne Is growing so that she is scarcely | where Helen Faucit made her first appea a) uow have them skillfully removed by the si sod when he came out unscuthed at the end | his operus have been played here, but they, | yecoguizable, She weighs 138 pounds of | ance as Juliet, and was rewarded by the ap. | Should be true and constgnt as 1. ‘The | able attention, Could she have had an ideal? | goon s kaife, What nexts Apparently the day Ay, & monument of perfect funocence, | too, are partly known from the selections Y W BUG NYAS YORBNI rvan. | bread aud butter sido of life is a minor con- | quericd the scribe. And yet sho m bavo | fy ot fur distaut whon one can be . loveliness and is tall at that. roval of the then dying Edmund Kean, van- Jessie Milward has been selected by Augu shed long ugo. A new ,"m.\ -house has now tus Hurris to play the beroines of Drury | been built in the dolightful old town and will had, because who has not one in_the class of | constructed from tho crown of°the hoad to clligent women whose bread is earned in the soles of the foet the education of youth? It a difcult tion, though no good faithf y lack any of She would like him to be a d of the 1 &rluwn-«l to the very echo. 'This ‘wrlm'm- which have from time to time been played 0 rendered mo extremely ‘populur with | and sung here under the direction of® Herr s ne of the old *“lags" of Hobart Town; and | Se dl, Mr. . Theédore Thomas, Mr. Walter waa often accosted on the streot by these | Damrosch and Mr. Van der Stutken. Lane melodramus for the next three years. be managed by Horuce Leouard, a Mierary an_and loved and respecte natter to photograph her thought., The « s have boen given for the erection of orthies and told some touching tale of thele The future author of Lo Timbre ' Argent,” | It is quite probable that Emma Romeldt of | man, not uu aclor. It will be opencd by Mri. 0% dons uoh 100 tos & A es Faiegrag hee thos Rt Tt | e merp s FYeG. (o8 ekt H 1y persecutions, In fact they quite looked | “Henry VIIL," “Etienne Marcel,” -Samson | the Boston Ideals, will veturn to Europe, the | Langtry, ALY 2 ound common sense and a certain dogree | was thut of a mortal who had never aveived. | the ¢ university at Washingt Tha me us an old “pal) These courtesies were | ot « Defllan,” '“Proserpine” and' “Ascanio" | Scene of her former sucoomes, next season Faus are of Toderate size and, exoept for | of rofinein: was an Adonis who knew not, | obscrvatayy will be a wooden ure. The Yor; nm-wlufi. hut the Teouveulonoe that I | studied at 'the couservatoire, whero his ox- | The latest invention of Musical Germay is | very ordinary use, are of lissq or lace, or & | A viva istructress in the Park school, | or, ut le 1 ins f his grac dome will' be constructed by the builders of ¥ belog poked 1a the ribs and | traordinary talent and prodiglous memory | & mechanical conductor, a figure which beats | conbination of both, whose fic s to udore her and who really | Mentally, while not & W or a Burke, he l the Lick observatory E, caused