Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 11, 1890, Page 9

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BEE. PAGES THE OMAHA SUNDAY MAY 11, ——rmy .‘.,1 OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, WENTY — THE FAIR'S STARTLING ANNOUNCEMENT The Sensation of the Season. A Fortune Sacrificed. SUMMER DRESS GOODS 2431C lgé WASH DRESS GOODS, MBER THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS GIVEN AWAY. A One-Fourth Million Dollars worth of Goods Slaughtered Fine, Plain, Colored DEBEIGES, INDIA CHALLIES. With Figured to Match. ALL THE RAGE NOW. Q 4 Three stocks (invoiced $150,400), bought and sold in April, leaves our own spring and summer stocks entirely too large, which we will sell right now at prices that are even lower than those we made during our recent great sales. But we are determined to reduce our stock in the next five days. The prices at which these goods will be sold, means a loss of money to us, “but the liberal patronage accorded to us in the last month, will carry us over any and all loss in the next five d: 1y's. PRESS GOOBS, Must Be EDUC LD DOI]]CSU Sk BES’ l‘ A\II RICAN ‘; LIGHT COLORED 2 A YARD. Shlrtmg Calico 1 4:c BEST OUAI ITY A YARD. Indigo Blue ¢ CALICO A YARD 5¢ Bcst \mehu er A YARD CHAMBRAYS Sl Pink and Blu A YA RD l ine Unb]uwhul SHEETING Yard Wide. Cuod Qua thy Bleached Muslin Yard Wide. J. L. BRANDEIS & SN, €€ Our entire stock gant pattern ]i\'(}l‘l.\‘ll’ F Rla.\( i SATEE Figured and plain, 14.C " IWooL Wide, all shades ENGLISH CASHMERE 826 All Wool Si1k Finlsh Henrie’tas Dollar Quality DOE Wide, Brill'tines All New Shades 190 50ca yard, Rest Quality 40-inch CASHMERES 350 Quality. 2le nPlaid and Striped SUMMER SUITINGS, 60 Cent Goods. G2, 50-in ALL WOOL $1.28 HENRIETTA D3¢ 502, 504, 506, 508, 510 S. 13th St. Corner Howard. GIRLS OF THE GREEN ISLE. The Duchess Sketches the Life of the Irish Rural Maiden, WHAT LIFE HOLDS OUT FOR HER. In the Midst of the st Abject Pove anages to be Very Disciples of the Danc (Copyright.) The Trish peasant woman—I allude to the laboring class—is, as a rule, an almost one, distinctly respectable, both in mind and conduct. While still a little slip of a girl, say thirteen or fourteen, she beging life—that is, work. She is then draughted from her mother’s eabin into the house of the ncarest fai there to learn how to milk cows, clean pans for the dairy, feed vigs, see to the poultry aud the eggs, boil potatoes, cabbage, and bacon, and learn besides to wash and dress tho ‘gossoons™ (little boys) and the stcolleens” (little girls) of the family; and, in fact, do all that has to be done in the h helped, of course by the mistress, the fa er , Who works as hard as her w For this our little enterer in life receives Poor wages, or perhaps, no wi at all for the first year, her keep and houseroom and permission to learn being accounted EQUIVALENT T0 A SALARY. Of late years, however, the latter arrange- ment has fallen through, the salary, how- ey being always demanded, and with justice too Barefooted and with a short bluo skirt (that they, weave themselves with o swall handloom)and that reaches barely down 1o the knee at first, and becomes cousiderably above it as youth asserts itself and the inches w, our little heroine scrambles through a work—in o slipshod fashion at foubt, and with many an angry word ll!hn mistress and often an indignant push. But time round e small, flannel 1l things, even the hard- :bble, and after a while'the small, insig: nt creature becomes somebody—Tho At first sho was only Biddy, or Kitty, or Maggio; now she is “Tho Girl"a great distinction, All through the week she lubors cheerfully, merrily, with a jest for every one and a sweet word always for the babies,” And 10w comes & that blessed day t, without,which surely the world of toil could ot hive lasted. In its institution lies an infallible proof to my mind of the di vinity that shapes all our ends, that rules the carth, and reduces the sea 'to limits, and guards, and \tes each moy t of ‘cach igmy who struts his little he upon our Jlinin stage. Well, this Sunday s THE ONE RECREATION OF THE POOK, both in town and country. But with the country culy I am dealing now, Our little heroine with' the first streak of dawn rises, fliugs aside the toil-worn gar- ments she hus worn during the past week and will wear for so many weeks again, and dons o new skirt of the saine texturoand hue, how- ever, aud (this is the crowning glory toilette) encases her feet that for days huve run_uncovered in stockings an laced To appear in chapel without shoes and stockings would be indeed a dis grad One may save, starve, decent to mass on Sunday! And surely there s much o bo admired in this regaid for cency, this determination to appear in one's best bib und tucker on the Lord’s day, to do honor to him, And now arrayed in Sabbath clothes, the parish chapel—a bare, bald © six long shoos. way to fixed | | his of the | scrimp and go | [mported ALL WOOL ($1.25)SUITINGS Our#l Quality 40-inch Black SILK (worth§$1.25) Brilliantine O9¢ T All the Remmants —of— DRESS GOODS Haliil: USUAL PRICE. Brilliantine AO¢ All the Finest 44-in SEE Ill] M PARASOLS & All Silk Pongee PARASOLS, 43C A L EYA1 Ty 64 Btiok: 24-Inch Umbrellas, 96C SERGE SILK Oxldized Silver Handles, Your cholce of 24-inch Guar- anteed Fancy Youi cholce of the entire stock of Fancy, Plald, 8ilk s Trimmed 9.00 089 Nutural ‘Wood b Fancy worth up to $5: for Hand 25 different styles long han- Tosea, vory hian- &, golil ena ¥ handle, All o mtat e ot CORSETS " OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF SEVENTY-FIVE CENT Summer GCorsets OUR VERY BEST QUALITY DOLLAR AND QUARTER Summer G()I‘%( ats DR. BARN SIMILAR TO Dr. Ball’'s CORSKETS ;)K'Hkl [IRE STOCK FRENCH Woven Corsets White and Colore Worth up to OUR ENTII TOC SILK STITCHED Black Sateen CORSETS Yormer price $1.40. BS', 10 8 E FAIR" 502, 504, 506, 508 and 510 South 13th Street, Corner Howard. HOSIERY,GLOVES, UNDERWEAR 3LACK IUGluu%m OC ALL OUR LAD\LS -0 |50c Imported 156 ALL OUR LADIES' FANCY HOSE oc 150 I{]III(S)Ul‘ D SEVENTY-FIVE CENT Liste THREAD| And Fast Black Hose,| 25¢ All Our Ladies' Fine|’ FAST BLACK 25¢c HOS leC ALL OUR 25C ALL SILK BLAOK JErsey Mirts, All Our Ladies' Black ALL SILK AUGJERSEY MITTS, 19¢ ALL OUR FINEST Black 500 Silk Mizzs, 29¢ ALL OUR LADIES RIB JERSEY COTTON UNDERWEAR, 8c ALL OUR LADIES OB Bulbriggan 28c P e UNDERWEAR, 12:¢ "OUR ENTIRE STOCK FINE LISLE UNDERWEAR, 39¢ Worth up to $1.00. NS J. L. DRANDES & SONS 502, 504, 506, 508, 510 S. 13th St. Cor Howard. about three miles from ing situated close to hangs over the se tome for a thou there among others, U school house rises the s ancient cathedral d it whose name vhose image cavved in all beneath th 1y long in the school two bells, chapel and cl tants and the om the I 11 the Prote stream down Our little b A PRETTY “COL of sixteen, s of all friends, mble through the I one member among his She kne she works derstand. round he most sys ing done churchys sprinkled he one outside, she now © the attentions of she is pretty, as many will surround her and compliments At times, howe not end thus tamely oceurs that fills all”h xpectation. As, for pr the high altar The unlucky or guilty weck FORGOTTEN TO PAY HIS (Money collected ding comes, which with fec nerals make up the has defrauded his nei thing he is determined wise broken the law. Breathless is the exc arrives at that point when may be expected and e culprit’s friends an himself has geners headache on these oc to his own house or cal ever, well knows that ever belfry. now makes her v and_earnestly, i, having self with the b the ser st i known to'be about to denounce from some_culprit among his flock, from the parishioners ne- to the amounts of their s in_ weddin does not stay the ever the little villag: sque spot, dear it 1was born | p over the trees of the pive of the chur ited to somo old Iish s St. Faughnan, and | stone is sunk in the | Phe crows caw all house tr , and the hureh, comimingle as Roman Catholics all 1 the lit- : several hills that ad sides to the LE BAWN' accompanied by man Catholics, to | or Father | y be, atin g that not ongrogation , she sits, she g through her way, 1 R ather ances | hcads”? and hav- | to go out into the b service ¢ in the : 10 re- ¥s,” who, if peasants ave, | extravagant foc the of the pay her ice within doe A at divarsion’ with a delightful example, when_the one hus during the | “pues? several in and fu- | iest's stipend), or else | ghbor, or stolen some- not toreturn, or other- itement as the e priest his . ation old - grow th s of d relatives, I ally a bad e e a | is_eonflned bin, This fact, how- priest’s wrath. Ho | word he utters will. be carried home to the criminal by his neighbors and will rankle there u fear that his spiritual refuse to atter hourarrives his death bea when ntil remorse and the pastor and master will the last DRIVES HIM TO MAKE CONFESSION what is stolen After this delightful will probably wend her the nearest *Pattern’ spot will by Cross,” and itzgerald » according to hood where it quare spot where the young people meet \d a circlo being trip it to and froupon the hard 1 with all the detert gusto that one u fashionuble ballroom Of late year this pretty and ‘har [ out; a very cele > was ma 1; who t'the pr week .Lm was what m DANCING MASTER OF T All odd hours, minut was attacked on'all sides ens filled with a laudablo desire Terpsichore, His met one, and as it may and fashionable teacher It was simple as it wa clous. Round th made of hay and then amed *“The Cross, four means simply a ¥ see but I er my right b of his male pupil he would bind & small or owing excitement our col waly to the place wh is taking place. Th or am's s Cross,” or any other tho traditions of the stands, 1t means a roads meet, and the dance.” ' Here all on a Sunday or a holi- formed by the onlook and dusty nination and twice the in u polished and custom, that was very and_inuocent is dying | ather telling me of ant (k aster of this used t ight be called the HE ENTIRE DISTRIOT, 08, moments ev s by men and m to hod of teachin; y be of use to rs I give it here, ant and efica stockinged leg rope commence operations, nodern as el | graud and no doubt picture | tir | under housemaid, from that in process of time L but a short He would first tune up the bagpipes ho in- | variably carried under bis_arm, and then bid | his pupil step forward. The first notes of a jig were played; the pupil, filled with ardor on hearing the beloved pipes, would begin a que war dance all t he is stopped by a stern repr v. Noj he ‘must conform his own, & mand from F to rules. “Now, thin, me boy,” says Mr. Flaherty, “yellldoas 1 bid ye,” or Il be off to Kitiy Mahoney's house, whose dead for want o' e this winuit, an’ the at her eross next Sundiy. Whin £ifth note ye'll rise upon ‘sougaun’ (1 an’ at the seventh ye'll sink upon ‘gad;’ & now begin, an’ to the divil wid ye if y do it before one-half hour is And now the sereech of the pipes begins, The famous kes o Mallow™ is in full swing, but above and over all sounds the voice of Mister Fluherty ) his pupi ““Rise upon sougaun, sik upon gad.” “Och murder, was_there iver sich a fool! Arrah, look at him, Mrs. Molone; tell me can’he be the sou of a_clever woman like you ‘RISE Well, the UPON SOUGAUY, I'm nl' now. SINK UPON GAD." nd fegs maybe ye'll be as' good em some day The meaning of gua® T have nover been able to dis no doubt, however, it bad its meaning in Flah Well, you must m; pleture for yourself of our Irish peasant footing it gayly to and f 0 artner opposite to crowd ssurrounding ther it were—a crowd consistin for the small part and of ins, male and female, for nandsome, healthy little 3 ked and bright- > and the carrymg on of th n the world;” and_often. dv have I wished that my own chi y nourished and fod on b nd ¢hicken broth, could look like these eo rogues, running about half naked and with nothing in th PRETTY, I save stirabout (a coarse porr potatocs, However, to get back to our heroine. she has learned all she tress—the farmer's wife—that is, how to hoil and wash, and how 7ot to break plates and dishes, her mother instantly looks round he to find'a place for her in Some gentleman family, where the wages will be higher and | the work less, 1t sounds terribly ungrateful. The er's wife hus had all the trouble of by in that little, wild and ignorant specimen of humanity, and when the latter has absorbe all that she can learn and when her mistres- has become nccustomed to her, and reasonably be supposed to expect some cor fort from her, the girl ¢ ing, and, aided and abetted’ by leaves her *to better hevself.” farmer's wife is left to commenc again—to take in another girl, who doubtedly take her in in the Sar little latér on. It is, in fact, o gene go-round,” and being expected on both sid is seldom resented by the farmer's wif The landlord's house is the one by the girl's mother for her next if by any chance an opening p self—*'the big house,” as the tenunts v call it. Here our heroino be maid, grows, (if she prov the great—suc D LITTLE STOMACHS 1ge) and hoiled When an from her first mis. farm- king her moth will un- > manner a chosen ven- onts jt- ually ins as kitchen a good girl) to to upper housemaid or parlor maid, or per haps is given over to tho young ladies of the family if she proves handy with her needle and develops a good appearanc Roman Catholio in its reli heart's core, still it is Irish peasant woman will prefer TAKING SERVICE WITH A PROTESTANT PAMILY, however poor, that with one of herown re- ligion. Deeply rooted as undoubtedly is the ke to Protestantism, the youug girls will cs from a Protestant than from and, 4s a rule make good and faithful servants, If a little careless at times and requiring always the eyc of the mistress to keep then g As a rule, on as it is to its ble that the ng. however, th: time, The vitude endures laborer's daugh I. 1 | | prices hter born in the happier than the dau the farming clas: above her—name marry us fancy tes, and long utl has ceased to be a joy, she ge cots her mate, a_ stalwi , in all probability, ou the landlord ries him, -~ She leaves her com ters as housemaid to_-be mistress and iife, and, as “Artemus Ward” would have it, a very ‘numerous mother” in a small, comfort- there, indeed, to rule 'supreme, any amelioration of the discomfort its her to her life's end. If the Irish peasant woman, however, marries into absolute poverty has asSuredly such compensations us acerue from a good and faithful husband and a quiver full of those before able quar “small creatures who make life blessed to the wedded. Tue Ducness, 1 to Tue Olmstead has has had 15,000 brook trout planted in the Blue near his homestead, nine miles south of Hastings, the past wecls Stewart of the bri vt & Collins, in this city this week for Pittsburg and the cast for tho purpose of purchasing necessary machinc for the manufacture of sewer tiling, in con- nection with their vitrified brick department. The fivm has purchased ten acres of ground at I ce, and will ship and use the same material asis used by the Beatrice sewer pipe works, M. J. ated for cast and lumber. at onco and active operation some time employment to quite & number of skilled workmen., Mujor Clarke and C. H. Wednesday of this - week sewerage system of Lincoln. At the annual meeting of the boa this week the for the 5 ¥ ident; V sident;’ J. I Ballinger, sccrefar, treasurer. The new board of ‘consists of M. L. Elsemor _yman, G. J C. A Paul, A. H. ( H. Bost- Peter Burger and V. B. Trituble annual exhibition at the Academy itation takes place June 21, Gold and ver medals will bo awarded for proficiency The city council is negotiating for the pur- chase of the electrio Jight works now owned by Gioorge Johnson, e’ piant 1s valued at BrE.) N, Fountain of this city has negoti v furniture manufactory plant in the several hundred thousand feet of He will move the plant to Hastings in June, giving Dietrich examining spent the 1 of trade Miss Frankie Beans of this city is visiting relatives in McCool Mus. Fred Renner is'the guest of her sister, Mys. Louis Stapper of Atchison, this week. Mrs. A. J. Neimoyer of Denver is the guest of old friends in this city this we The ladies of the Pythian sisterhood in this | | city contemplate preducing “Damon and Pythias” at an_early day. They will bo as sisted by Mr. W. W, Heathcoatc, late of the Bandmann Shakesperian company. Postmaster Jumes B Heartwell is having the postoffice renovated throughout and the change has made it very presentabl -~ - James Whiteomb Rile rom his appearance he would be taken fora farmer, a railrond man or anything except a"poet, says the New York Star H6 isof a'hi hly organization, and seems to constant pleasure in 1s & good illustration of hard times that literary | ple undergo.. He was a cleyer writer and versifier for many years, but did not mal ny great hit until a few years ago, when his compsition, **When the Frost is on the Pumpkin,” took a firm hold on the popular heart. ' Befo that time he expérienced trouble in sell- ing his short poems at such ridiculous as $8 and # cach. Now he .-nm‘mmu!s from $25 to $30 for the same works, vel Riley the xpects to put the same into | nervous | ind a deep | | MADE LOVE IN A PRISON CELL ter Orispi, THE SORROWS OF A MESALLIANCE. Rosalie, the Laundry Girl, hful in Adversity Took to Drink When Prosperity Came—Cupid's Pranks in Politics. The truth about the romantic love affairs of M. Crispl, the Italian prime minister, vague rumors of which erop up whenever his ne is meutioned, is fully told in M. F. Narjoux's life of Crispi. Hewas born in 1519 at Riberia, and after having taken his degree settled as barrister at Palermo at the age of twenty-two, and n laughter of the owner of the house where he lodged. Two years later Rosina Sciarra died, and the oung man lived for some time entively for his work and for his country, having become one of the most ardent and enthusiastic of tho yung Italy” party. Before long his zeal for hiberty and equality were rewarded by expulsion from his country, and he main- tained himself for some time at. Marseilles as a journalist, till the the sunny skics of Sicily and fogs of the north no longer, and tried to obtaia @ humble position as clerk at Vero Lungo, a small place not far from Turin, But, his lctter of application not being couched in sufiicient servile language, th post w a more suitable applicant, and Crispi remained at Turin till, having been accused of taking part in a revolution- movemen, he was imprisoned in the Palais Madames It was in the prison cell of this old palai that the romantic affair began which has cast such a deep shadow ove Crispi. One morning,says M. Narjoux,Crispi looked sadly at the ray of sun which made vain ef- forts to creep in between the iron bars of the window of his cell, when the door opened and a pretty girl appeared on the threshold smil ingly offering her services to him, sa Pall Mall Guzette. Her e vas Rosalie Montmasson. She was in tho service of t prison laundress, and offered to take the clothes of ‘amessieurs les prisonnies poli tiques,” who were not clothed by the prison authorities, Rosalie took the prisoner’s bundle of clothes, brought them 3 seems also to have come when 6 Was nothing to take or briug back; she was the niece of the wife of the turnkey and had the run of the prison Crispi was scarcely he was tall, slender, and resembled in could stand the cold y thirty-four years old, tolerably good looking, no way t Crispi of the preseut day. His long haix eIl 1 curla on his shoul %, his eyes wore an but tender expression and his smile was pieasant. He looked melancholy, almost sad, and bad, in the girl's eyes, the' of a martyr and of the eminent man around his head, And then this ferocious this intrepid ier, could transform himself at will into an fervent lover, Rosalie was be- fore long in love with her haudsome client r illustrious prisoner, and Crispi returned love. Presently, the police having found no just cause against the prisoner, ho was released but was expelled, and went to Malta without any means of subsistence, ac m|)miul by the little laundress. Black valted the lovers at Malta; bread and herbs werg thelronly food for many ¢ till Rosalie, who was « g, devoted, and f of | courage, found work to do, and Crispl, together with other exil nall | paper, La Staffetta, and « led in | Hammatory articles at his oppor very | wiys 1 ome A Sad Romance in the Life of Prime Minis-~ 1 who had lived under | the life of M. | audacious | conspirator, | ll the | governor of Malta foun iin, Before 1 that he ki and gratitude toward whose devi aving Mal wanted to marry he gitimate wife; and; in ¢ impending separation fr forge a link which would On communicating this and fellow-exile, very calmly and him that a union was almost inv. and pain, the sentiment of insur, rmoun t ihle diffe nd, thou Rosalie’s ud a Jesmt prios duct tho ceremony, whic made Rosalie his lwful pi fled to , Ma : poleon I11. in which all the Europe engaged, was carried on The postofiice wus not were vigilant; consequ t of the mission o the v the commui London and important ations wh basket without a lid, very Ji terior, mi and cus them, i banl, the dircctor of wh and in addition gave lish climate did not it to Paris co-Ttalien, asing. Then followed tumult new development of poli succeeded by another; | an outcast, but sat, as de the Turin parliament; dent of the chamber, anc the name of the lawyc man had becon however, ouso o houst t from id from his 5pi should hy lar, smoott home life; was 1ot happy at homle, had come only too true. as Mme, Crispi, husband from place to p! ents of former days p a diamond cross for h cause; honors poured been presented o tho flattered by her husban mented by aniable ofcia been turned. Dre i} [ s len with jow rounded by a whole m mals, she had become almost ay when Crispi came her helplessly drunk he v, and went in d h his old friend Tam proved a friend in need mony, he explained to tense astonishment,” hy the bonds could eq by Tamajo, « s1spi became 1in which lives now in Her conduct @ good bourgeoise, and matron One day, in 1873, Cris at Palermo. Walking rooms, he heard manding that is i | France charm for Crispl; it aud he Belonged was | 160k vound, i rethat thi but he f L duty to_fulfill, a Giorgio quictly, the lovers barrier Crispi, London nudon at the tim vious groups of *Young. 11 have astonish officials meanwhile but had na King, sily be 1 impatient female | pointed out to her 0 voice had o p d it advisable to exilo ta Crispl considered duty of love Rosalie, his faithful otion had been un- nd whose fate was linked to his. to make her his le- order to prevent their om becoming final, to d sceure their reunion, desire to his friend Tamajo, the latter, tried to convince intended by Crispi followed by regrets rent education and forming an to a happy however, would igh ho was 'so poor ddding ring had to be pre- 1to him he insisted upon muki her his t undertook to con- h, as Crispi beli wif Rosalie follo zzini’s guidance, who tho waork of and his government, n revolutionists werg with utmost zeal. safe, and the police ntly Rosulie took the ssary charged with the t ws or th Ital the refuge nd of hich s in avis had to exchango. as a woman of the people, Rosalie which_she kept some at poultry, whose in o with papers that 1 the gallant polic who examined took @ post in a ich was a compatriot, Italian lessons, but the suit him, and present- as_correspondent of 11 bis politicul activity and excitement; one tical lifo was rapidly Crispi was no long puty for Palermo, in ie y politician and states hold word his ardent parliamen- incessant, work had a calm, regu- unfortunately he Tamajo's prophecies Rosalie Montmasson, aturally followed he laco. Crispi's adher: his wife with v services to their upon her; she had surrounded and fricnds, compli als, and her head had in' the “loudest” of y, and always sur: nagerie of pet ani demented, and home and found ave id's’ could bear the yoke s pair to seek reft jo. who once m The marriage cere the husband's ‘“in ad been a fraud, and sened. Rosalie, onsented o a sepim © » more free, “to > had been livin, Rome, retived and rreproach : she s a stout, good looking Pl was at rec through th ption wded might_be uliax s sweet, harmonious, yman to whoimn it fair. He did not thie of the Crispi \d elt strapger, who, @s he heard, was a youug | | flame | eylinder widow, fixed upon v Crispi made a the stranger was th and from (h it moment At Rome they met tics and his count love. He loved a won i love, and his love y od by a religious e od by Cr attention bein, ing Rosalic ousy. A year Peppin who is about Comman the civil mg made Mme. band, who to be was bor, had b e beforo (! post had and L tho wife from the and it was duc was publish and in; paper Crispi retived crown it from him agai pi in order attracted, Montmasson an outburst of jeal- afterward their now a handsome ispi their municipio after to lis_inqu using Crispi of the a2 chirge of 25, which, howey all evening specchin par ves met r only. forgot his v thought of worthy o for li i v, and o n who w s veturned. eremony the tima ent public void caus- being for 0 pre and to only child, girl of seventeen, engaged to the duke of and 5 W few yei lawful wi An opponent of Crispi’s, M. Nic of the was entrusted the husband witnesses com- the civil mal ies that o 10 news- In 1878 7, and the bigamy against ended in & minister iin the Pi bigum minist lict for the accused, who returned to the zained his old ince risen to the hi following sto words, west lady in the land" ‘reg but, th Narjou state, n M. hi monial affairs ; In his capac quirinal. Ho wife was )wl Hl > wity to violent ange vives that the 1 been invited as the stupid ste vived ! this cffrontel nal to he majesty’s ovisiy s01 dificult rumors, etc t up and said in an sesty that if by this He in in ambig y as pres but ung position, st post in the which we give shows how ‘'the vded his matri- ident of the council, ation to dine at the d to find that his the invitation, and when of the other minis- What did this exclu- y of a double The blow could only He would aot stand t at once to the quiri- wsdue. He found her only ed an ted, and the oficial ous phrascs as to the urd and ridiculous rry voice cvening Mme. Crispi is not treate 41 like the wives of the other min- istors, Italy roput \\l“”ll will twenty-four imed in Muwme. be proc h Crispl received the invitation, A = i wder In the Navy. The 6-inch tridges are compose: grains look like the other so that th will be inthe st through, in to go at the h the charge orde graing thro same time letin, Tl a wire running keeping them in drawn over the moved: The means of *ierd not the the This bag is der and says tl o bt ulus enveloj herme has [ ball nder ¢ the d and a When the oyl the mag of the bag is serted in the gnn; pulled off and a charge home The weight I'he 1 1 inc inch in diam Azine and of the ist breech iron nuts, and are up by piling the gr ne line from and start tion at all points of the e 8 B¢ th place grains and is sight would bur omes on deck lid of the tie-end removed the other end ram out of rraing hes o lel loading rifle dof powder car- whose made ins one on top of hole in the centre all tho way allow the the ignited all the way the igni- artridge at the San Francisco Bul- built up on forms the grains, A bag is then the wires rthened by if it were st the cloth, to rough reng braid; d in a copper « tically sealed lid on to carry each by. from of caso in is then the c¢ylinder, fifty groins und 3} it and the mer shoves of the cartridgo 'ls wbout 600 Are gth

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