Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 1, 1890, Page 13

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A NATION OF LAWMAKERS. |3 n had he been in the _ sen- I JIN(Q B ‘(N E ATION MAKERS. of o stato ot " xew vor | LILLIAN -~ SINGS FOR ~ NUNS Ho was toaching a body of intellizent young L o | gentlemen, some of whom, eleven years after, —_— i g > | were in the house of représentatives and in _4 The Instinot for Legislation Btrong in the | the semate. They ow very well t * | 8he Bowed and Smiled and Threw Kisses to \ ; ¥knew what he was talking about; they had . American People. his letter in their hands; an influential pe the Holy Women, gon among their number was in the New J and introduced a bill base nd A MODEL LEGISLATIVE SYSTEM, | Confesediy based on Dr. McVickars ideas, | \PWAS A VERY PRETTY EPISODE.| : e Vork ot senas, ang intai b I'o close ouf the hats and gents’ furnishing the logislature of N gence out his ideas in a a Voke Gives Her stock, as we were crowded with the clothing stock e epresontative ln In Constant | |king" yatom of the lavgest commerciat | | ideas About Tewe Art in stage | ANd Were anxious to dispose of the most bulky goods first. We have succeeded beyond our Touch With His Constituents, While | gations of ihe world Launtiter knothes Ane 1 1 1 1 i in Europe the Government In- AT OBIECT LESSON POR TIE NATION bl greatest expectations in reducing the stock, but have still some excellent suits and odd pants, odd % troduces ANl the Bills. The sm.ln orINrw York was thus uhlr;lw n Prima_Donna. =] > ’ | give an objeet lesson in what we may c ate racte ” s 5 M ranls 1 ’p 01 A . , av n ‘ | Rormal school of Tegiaintion, Arst, 10° a1 the coats and odd vests that we sell the coming weck at still lower prices than we have offered them. [Copyright.] ‘;‘:l:?:':‘ull\:,\‘l‘:r":‘ldl:““‘:I:SI”II;;II‘II;D;V‘:::lll\l(‘!fr'i;:,K‘ It was reception day at the convent of the l lllS we L we “~ill ])C("ill the C]C’ll'infl' ()u‘t of the BY EDWARD EVERETT HALE. 44, Now, it our s of governinghiad | Holgy Angels and among the visitors who § < § The instinct for legislation of the Amerfcan | E:"';!I‘}lh" ‘;A.lrn)In-;:::r-z:‘sl‘:'[;r'lullll H{n:‘ l::fl‘;\:‘l:d:fl ('l'fl‘(’(‘\‘; l;'l't“rl\‘mr rn“nl"r.\m 1‘,1'(" \\‘lu.: Lillian = M 2 #eople has been one of its remarkable char- | Would wait till the secretary of the theasury | Russell, says a New York dispatch to the I I i I { I I ucteristics in history, | :’lf,t[ha.l ‘:\nlml \';mm:‘mn l:r;vn 5. hod an | San Francisco Examiner. She had called to GE N S U N I S I N G GOO DS ‘ Senator Hoar, who is perhaps the highest | onportunity in which he could introduce the | soe her little daughter, a mite of a girl of five authority in this country on such subjocts, | dlscussion of them with some hope of success, | years of age, for the morrow would bo her . M $ ’ gl i 3 . (s . . D said,in his it address ot Marietta. that | 1 v forty three. Eisuin roudy 5 | birtnday. and s tenssrs wanied 10 e | 1t 15 well known that we carried no trashy stock in this line. Fine goods were our specialty. | the men who made the constitution and thoso | Yy your experiment of course you Have | yte the event with a doll party, to be given who surrounded thom hud shown that they | orty-thres chances for '8 favorable | 1 Ulc i arbor behind the chapel. The nun Everything that had the most remarkable genius for legisla- | ot had bt one parliament. o consider. it who presided in the reception-room went to )lwuwh!vh WAs ever known. 3ut, more than this, in the state legislature | consult the mother superior about the mat- | = = = = : * Certainly, when ono comes to the history of | ¥ou hx;:e u-r;_ o8 r_';uu-h)mul the neaver | ter, and during her absence the fittle \/ \/ G H l HE FIRE nlm;my any one of the colonies he is, if he | A everybody, and_ the snggestion of one | Student dragged her mother to the piano = = studies it carefully, amazed to note the ability | jntelligent man produces ité right effect on | and demanded a solo from “Nadjy \ il Hieel Al f with which mon not trained as Iawyers noras | the pespie whe aro. in. contiul.. But mors | Lillian complicd, The first was Schubert's Vill be sold at one-third its value. Here are a few sample price historians built up thirteen states. You be- ll_mn this, if we had been working under the | “Serenade,” and then *“A Green Hill F! gin in Massachusetts, for instance, with the European system, the project would have Away.” Then the mother sent the little meeting of the divctosof & trading corpora. | Dot SRS RSN WOUIS | duugitor oz o gassof water: e chld Gents’ fine linen collars 75¢ per dozen, and 3 ' Were selling for $2.80 and $8. s come out in 1760 with an inde- | is, from a central upper hicrarchy, who | opened th pendent commonwenlth, so organized that it | would have to elaborate it even in its de- | piano, exclaimin is ready for any of the duties of government, | tail. The chances, therefore, are | = “Look, mamma, all the sisters are hearing et (s g L 100 to one ugainst the probae | you e ] i 0 - ::w";‘x‘th{l' P Nioud govins tHomasivey sytths | DLty o8 youe winulng: the. wamp sv0; | YG U here ey whte, mums and Cuf $ 5 DT AL v that they would govern themselves with- | cess, when your bill is to be drawnand | Sure gh, there they were, nuns s 5 out the assistauce of the crown they did not | agreed upon “in substance by a cabinet, to ates in black robes and white veils. Were selling before the fire at $4 and $4.80, have to change a single detail of the method | What you have when y 10 be sug- crowded tho hall and stood on the long, ST dhenas & ot feal 1 the il | Fosied b hd v e s | browa Sl Trom, o el post 1 Light summer underwear 50c, its details, | > people. | upper landing, and when n appeared in which had passed since Winthrgp's time the o iy theOnile he phonises of exim. | th doorway the elojster. rang wWith aplanisc Former price $1.00 leistators of Massachusetts had made a | inat gt had | steuction, throngh which every. bill asit | the holy women along the balustrade and atea’ ov actod. With @ | Roes through its stages in one oranother | 40wn the cool hall, but they clasped their certain practical ability they ha cked core, encore.” Nere selli € € 3 certain practical ability they had plucked S T RO RN ING LML g .\Vu e selling at $1.B0. Only a few of these Dad it e betor ono, and graduany | 1o (he ol Now En s shirts, former price $1.50 and $2, they had built up the constitution of the gov- | is loft to the town me 1 1 on, ilumination and synthetical con. | She bowed” and smiled and threw Kisses to " 0 1 et sy E10\aLoos Vit thp, mlstaii Fancy pcrculc shirts 75c, ficuse ot onsof 'onr popalacicxisiatutes, white hands and calléd softly but enthusiast sulely oit ot Bk sy had repealed the esponded, and fo | . ment of cach town | pepertoire was exhausted, I c arc ting, in | made and granted, sh ernment in which thoy lived. which ~ the citizons themselves ap- | Drodht fom iwo. enapr it ot We sell them this week at 78c each. STl fesl o pear and discuss_the projects | room and for Y Mgl U L Y S UTTVEONTANKRICARS: brought before them. Whether the side- | the muns played ke tho aoronanime s Ucron maaiments A fine linc of gloves at 50c, s all over Miss Russell told the at it was the most inspiring a It becomes the American’s duty to see that | \walic shall be made of stone from the north | After it w this remarkable gift, which distinguished his | quarry or the south quarry is a question tobe | superior ¢ 0s < c air 5 ) 5 country for 200 years, is not lost or tarnished | determined by the people in council. The re- | ence she had ever sung before, and th W Vot n] sold at $1 80 a D iir before the fire. . in the third century of her existence, It is | Sulthof these mectings is not so muchleg- | cluse assn C 2 BoNEIYS administration: nm the training of | in the cloiste 5 B 3 governments in this affair. It is, indecd, al- | such a meeting, for men, for hoys even, is ad- | QLI s, Other articles in the same proportion. lators, I have Stage Laughte most painful to follow the y edings of the | mirable for the ma French chamber or English parliament, | heard with great inte Foncalt ARG RO lCEItY y ; s % R 5 $ e ot o English parliaments | gl town of Mentor, In tho wostorn, ros ay writes Tt Vokes e New Yok | Bear in mind that most of these are not damaged in the least for wear, and are the new spring with business that legislation s a sl i e g T el L okl of W prominene and summer stock which we had just put in before the fire. d gainly and her work 4s not al sorved, therofore, that there is a very great | them. T eannot but wish' that, th g LA tendency in France and in England, as indeed | Mestern states, people may come b Folores th e e i Tica at, through the | ways of the best, but her lugh —well. T would ) TAT W 4 e ) B ) 3 R 2 3 i in England, as indeed | ¥ 1 Deoplo iy come buck thus o | rather hear Blanlc laueh thin sce the most e | | ‘ 1 1° all Europ atio sermit, the gov- | Uhe experienceand the habits of the New Eng- | boautiful and talented woman act.” The | | \ I\l \ in i Fuxopean nations, to pormit the gov- | janders who planted them. In New England | stage laugh to be' thoroughly offective, must \ ) J I’ J oy . in all bills, so that the | we are quite sure that we have not outgrown | be natural. A strained lwgh is at onee no- members of the legislative bodies have sim- | thetown meeting, and the great disadvantage | ticeable and detracts from an artist's 1 2 1 F A Ig N A M STREET OM A H 5 5D AT O 5 of veto, Our | of the creation of small citics is that the dis- | popula W L THING? J atic Performances Which Continue to Delight Omaha Gentlemen. [ on as nee is | pogple for the discussion of questions of local | actre almost impossible, and it will be ob- | administration which may be important to | gula it is desirable that a large e e S hed vo. | cussion whichwas given in the town meeting | In come American habit, by which any body of peo- | ro¢fasislation and for administration exists in | of the morrimont shall. como. from tho ple, or indeed any man, interested in the sub- | those cities no longe Whoever wishes to | of the house; that if the aiditors, if pl ject, may bring before the legislature a bill | bring about an advance in_legislation in our | shall wholly ve way to their feeling preparca for debate, is scarcely known in | states will do well to inquive whether, in the | in this manner encouvage the efforts of those practico in the | aro of Enropo. It | different wards of our citics, frequent, meet- :..-n.mld the footlights. I' donot favor the 2 e i y not be held for discussion of popu- | broad com laugh—the horse laugh—one would be impossible here, if we did not di- SN HioA A RA A e TR DL 8 fills the auditorium and re- vide government so that forty-five different | men who can intelligently state what are the us clown to her repe Yegislative bodies have the oversight of mat- | plans which are before the administration— | To my mind ilvery so i ters which there are left to one. We | how the seweris to be built, what has been | slowly ‘to i thus gain the benefit of the careful oversight | the exporience of other citics, and the and opinion of perhaps a hundrod or two | Hvemso oo aid it o, lar topi Iy,which A o for next has been en musical dire Fempleton The whole ¢ ious he i 'Hu\ is v L to give them, what T call the far more ple “brook members of each legislature,while, in London | their duty s well as their pleasure to_be o in’ combdly of ulio Lightesb voiny | aaraduss withwiie FROM HAMLET TO EAST LYNNE. or in Paris, even if the bill be printed, still | present, there would be a school of admir un is the only object to be attained. B. 7. Henloy, whos s which have run in my or those who have uttered \eous, 1t is almost impossible in the rush of business l"fl“fll; and l'd'uhl:llm:l such as ]lhfi fm}” I have heard lau indivi alke o real offort for its | Were trained in, whose remarkable gift in | head long v for an individual fo_make n real effort for its | 1), ,cq lines is so noble a distinction of their | them wete de Mad, t for next sea s af Tho . They were so spor By > Like dy Excel wmendmend, excepting in those move import- | | Castleton RN Do e T L S considered na- | Distory. s0 th Ay nataral, and, above all, heart Stlole v wer the ers of ant mattors which may bo considered” na - : R e iy ot o graoter. CONNUBTALITIES. as the most p lividuals' pe SCHOOL OF LEGISLATION, Now here is really our school of legistation, | A Californian has secured adivorce from | "1 cari excus ind an admirable school it is. A young man | his wife because she batted him with a but- | but she should nes mes into a state legislature, and it is quite | ton hook. s 10 become faulty. In fact, to my mind, thin his power to read and ‘examine George P. Babs e is more rhythm'in a musical and well fally; every bill which is brought forward. | of Youngstown, ¢ da di- | modulated laugh than in the best executed On th ibjects in which he is well in- | vorce from buxom W a Buck, a widow | aria formed it is quite within his power to wake | to whom he had been united days be- | Gr stions and improvements, and it is cer- | fore. He says they found marricd life to- | the laveh and the chuckle. The latter is aid, that all the | gethier unendurable and she says he w aptable only to the meclodramati e people. cctionate to her daughter and that this | and then should be the exclusive property of 3 blelaw | caused the trouble. the heavy villain, out from tho cauldron of discussion of | . Willivm Borger. a Chi Tamut liever that the I ono of our local legislatures are this much | just completed u romantic great pani v dyspepsia, that is providing greater than they are for such a law to come | yying Katharine D the unfortunate suffering from tiat disc out from the short-hand wmothods of the | Austvian noblemun can be induced to it. At any v French and English parlisments. And we | old countr the pary i s shown | the suit Funes sing out of tun permit_her laughing prosperous retired tailor at distinetion should he made between s come- ¥, others No tragedy for me nature ointments it is il William came to- this country, > same tine we | raised $400 and returned. The young couplo in the training of the men who made the the obdurate papi the slip and were statute. 1ded on the alin New Yorl Just as it happened in_the first century of | A couplo i Huncock county, Mi pur existence when a great many foolish ‘and 3 nearly all the trage- of them. It is three Manafuctus Sopranos, and first-rate _oncs ve beir bad lws were passed, only to bo repealed, the | Promis 8 s e manufactured in such quantitics s to be now same thing happens easily now. But, if one X ! NELIYE, u the musical market. Mn ¢ ;“,,“ ; state make a mistake in its legislation, | Lo Have sudd ne to 4 realizin one of the most successfu L2 ' there s an opportunity, generally in thenext | the fist that there was dunger of overdoing | yyrers,” Then there are the classes Lirlin i () ) gonors 1 thon good thing and that their engagement had o One ) arie S that the minister was calted on one night to aRIEHS i get outof bed and perform the wmarria et AR o on e ceremony. g sopranos and Sweden in ot ho have the s Wrede of San Francisco fell in love | charm of stranzencss, sa. lliam Scott, a variety actor, who re- | the Londou Truth, But th han ardor worthy of | tyalto is the vara avis, and ).000 estate which | weight in 1. Andwho eve of this kind wio was not r, to_correct that’ mistake, and no oth But if it makes a forward step ts legrislation, every state is on the look- and in o fow years that stop forward has i taken by the country. Interesting illu trations of this ar periment tried in Connecticut, under the lead of Mr. Hinsdale et el e ' | turned her afreetion w compun’ or OrpOr: ™ the quarter-inte state in 3 has followed p | tho young lad. d Lagrange, of Ernest nd now Mlle. Paule’ Gaynard WILL BXHIBIT ™ 4 DAYS ONLY & BUMMENBING SUNDRY, JUNK st held at P same day or's incompar: Jolin T, W Connceticut ristation, and every | they were marvied. and apt to run into a Ruk | i furope. has' fol. | the bride’s stalwart brothers who had b by | s A B Sinsinarab s | ation of America. | t€ rly opposed the match, sought out the | tip sut. Mile. Richard has Mr, Scott i o most of the |y an who niade mil wilar insts s the experiment tried by stato of M hich permitted p colors of the spectrum. The wounded groom, | . Sho refuses to | against whom s indictment has be however, salves his injuries with the posses- | except ons her own cond ich the tify s witnosses in tho ca sion of the young bride, and the thought of | managers think exorbitant half of a "Uhis improvement was su 3 h{00, third more than what the L8IY —ON THE— Mr. Albert Paine of Bangor. It has now been 1 to appear in “Ascanio” as 220 1] oy, and always futroduced into the logislation of half the rpenter ‘of Wynkoop- | sho twice as much. That part was aves, the | wr citizen, ued at Me., eloped with Samuel ild of a prominent and wealthy left his proj American_ states, and the example again | 1 followed in England. But if a matter this, confessidly experimental, had been for a contralt e over Europe, Ch cago, where there is a Mrs. Wyman, was not in th SEAS Caor. 17ih and Chaprles Sis 10t to thio degisation of & body with national | §35,000, to n distant relative, The other day | thanght of. ul contraltd was dis- | 0 fiv IR arGalE 1o Ranai10te oo koes Jon e ttha found a packugze on his dooystep ad- [ covered in but sho trial wat 2--PERFORMANCES DAILY--2 Euglish and_ French parliaments, it would hita, o opened it mud found that | French in spoalding wid sinig lnst, e s o placo Tiave been well nigh impossible to bring the s of bunk notes, On. the top | that would force the most lome suf e con ’ A . t pandors b o T i Ferveriment to u ripp note was a picce of paper on which was writ- | French audiences, to hiss her off the ment of Bdward K. Mansou. 3 s, School for | Afternoon at 2 O'Clock. Evening at 8 O'Clock, t e e & avirar ooERa R ten the following: “Amanda is dead. Five [ The next best is 4 Senorita Domenceh AU the San Carlos cra Lisbon ¢ yout my idea, for the reason that H ; ? years ago. Since then I have saved the en- [ is, however, inexperienced in the urt of have a cavivus custom of giviug itten production and divectly il- 5 Another very interesting instance of the | vlosed. If it is any recompense for the injury ua during tho lnst days of tho ¢ f human natuve,” 3 1’\]') I\/[IL’SION [3 result of our method is in the banking sys- | T did, for God's sake take it S G5 o in which all th chur R e Murphy @ == » B G tem of Ingland and of this country. Since [ Amunda was the name of Axmiiler's runa- by women. This year the opera was e o R tho circulation of this country has been Two strango wi took | King- WA The tow Bucksport, Me., o .\ \\mm m and } June 2nd based on bonds deposited with " the govern- | o ORI T 2anlnstaeind g rer for & th stao pr wtion of +0ld Jod Prouty” the | § Il . ) e ment and kept by it, which are suflicientin | ours, * Tavititions were issued for the mar- | the Tilustrated London tall, | othe e tow v L Wood_doesn't 1 o drama ab il | would walk ton miles any time.” he declared amount to make it sure that, in any contin "of Jacob 1 r to Miss Mary Post, | witha sl well-devel Hep | Story und al oh ¥ ho thii s duo to the f h acaitmiayad. M st geney, tho bauk circulation will "bemade | Both are about twenty-two years of face is a pure oval, with a nose and | Peing local celebriti wed bR R L kAL good. This has been the system of England | Wyen the guests usscmbled at the bride's | well-curved nost He of bluish | £© with cannon fiving, | e BA Aciaksas wiia o since 1543, when it was introduced by Sir | nomme o witioss the coremony there e Nha -0t Toion | ana hemalsing., The porformance in ¢ injcithoibad s rho il Robert Poel. I should lika to say in passing | pridegroom, It wus "Wt Mi well-defiued curved und | ovening was followed by u public bail and mo more thau Ada Rehan in “Tami that, though the eyclopedias speak of Sir | ot Post, a yo S : s of duricbrown curiing T pper, in which the entive audic i o au Ada Rehan in “T'a Robert Pecl us introducing o complete sys- | prige, was missing. While those pr ensemble. She mak fascinating Mar. | buted B B i pal S tew then, he himself spoke of it as only the | e Qiscussing the ' situution, young Lie with @ heavy Plait of dark haje hay Tho “Beau Br i Mr. Man o Maome, inolings ta juning of @& system, which would | 4, Miss Henrietta Post ulightod from u ca wn hor back, Her face and figuve | fleld has so richly and corre 3 1 ut e 1. o onco had the o sisequont. gt Galargement and viage and entered the houso wheroe they in- | haveno trace of the peasant about thew, | the Madison Square theater, ik, is I plots R x Vo auidbnk o tha Jossiply rectitication T remember to have | formed the parents and gucsts that they had | however, and her costun »long und wilike the renl Brum ) Nise The Henrietta 4 more, T think, | cardi will nevor forget, what grand perform it W er loved anything, Richavd Mansfield de Floard Mr. Gladstone sy this. ih BAFiGoRt, el 15 bolieves 8 | aracerulin draperys bub: sl a ploasan ! t went expert e A making that reatitication himself; ho ex- | jytended clopement. The young wife is only | pictureSque. What could I do, uiy dear agt, <ita) | PRIOIBROUSGCL NS AGMIFAKAD, AtRR, 00N }.\.‘le courteolls wish that Sir Stafford | gourteen years old. L4 ¥ 4 - = sped, when f »olt mat - thos and | tinued Mr. Mor think probably the theote, at that time the leader of the op- | ““There ‘s in New York, upon one of the MUSIC AND THE DRAMA, on 1 actually saw Lady Mary cat, cab i lifo that [ | MOSt oxquisite picce of acting that ever came position, would undertake it. ' Now it 18 iu- | post fashionable thoroughfures, a most mag- - Lo 3 bi The key to the real dandy’s character | was fo work, and | Budermy obscrvation £ l eresting to observe that Sir Robert Peel bor- | piet 188 HAYS JAGPGERE TR B e Dalaces- | ,, Jenuie Kimball is seriously thiuking of put- | js hest scen during pouniless exile, w 8 v plays 1d Mrs. Drew in ¢ Slde apringa ttachment. No horse motion. rowed this system, and confessed that ho bor |yt 08 > Toolod ot by the senti- | ting Corinne in long dress SR SRt e A A as D, ounces ‘Rip Van | .A: 4; Poppleton is of The oldest and largest earrviage factory l"\'m\‘](\l it, l(r\.;:‘.‘xlx..u : m;:‘n::’rmrl:‘m\nm-x‘ ¥ | mental woman without o tear cowing 1o her MM:' Edwia H. Price has become Clara | ing him 0 a wing of a capon, and tryir with the uemo of | (Othello.n ,f“’_‘“‘;[?".‘.}', e o i | in Omaha for fine work, using the celos ork. b duced ow York ERRREATHMIER ched to it. It | Morris' business manage morsel of it, he took it up in his napki art is RS M A GICR R LR N o n 1838, and was perfoeted there in 1840, How | }x:]l\-lx}.'-l".r.x:.ll' Mo dt 200 Y 'n.-h.i: Joseph Jefforson 1s huntlng the festive | to his dog and said alowd: Hore, > you i I like it b stage | brated spring washer axle. Drafts and did the legisluturo of New York come upon it H 3 . 't your teeth throu, d of an old Dutch | trout at Buzzard's E family—for the woman he loved. Throughout | The Hanlons *Fantasma® i the whole house, which might have been | to have made $75,000 during its pres called “The House Beautiful,”? were the | tour, b colors, furmishings, oruumenta’ and dainty | “Syuart Robson has accepted a_p 1es that were the young bride's taste, # Hobaom bas sooepted B ride-to-be was found dead in bed on the Oorbott entitled "I Murriag Joars betora the banking law of 1839 was | Wedding morning. The Inst kiss sho had estimates furnishod Fine repairing a Richard | gpecinltys if you ca d-~d if T can.”” No hospitality ever melted Brummell worth i o - JUNE Hugh Murphy cherishes a profoy » two of the old time tr Y and “Sparticus.” shows up A man's meanne: he the other 1109 and IIII lllnlm- \'., Omaha, As early as February 17, 1827, Dr. McVickar, | 2e8 in New York—the he who wiis professor of politi Columbia college, wrote to s member of the W York legislature a lotter entitled “Hints on Bauking.” In that commun- foation he foreshadowed the New | iy York law. The letter was written eleven 1 Hall says * ‘Han I go to see it every chance »f the play is the only rc erring it to other play 1 al economy at Boecause of their directly opposite Icnjoy one ubout as mich s tho Wallace, is Ladies' Hon May there has b A novel called *“The Confessions of a D | given, had boen to her lover the night before. s Jartlott say amlet inte passod, but it was seed well sown, and tho | fi¥e IS to her lovor the ulkht befero, | peing dramatized 1or production in | o chanes that would mak i) Rostloth anvn, !/Ramlat i 4 aw contaius not only the ideas of tho lettor, | jo'ave to heras she rested fn her came | London. ok o et e t AT D but almest the precise forms of its expression. | Byt ho lives in the beautiful house and does, | Tho privato theater w tti has built Sweet rumors hin wit h fine surrour 5 THE PEOPLE GOVERN. with his great fortune, a deal of good, all in | at Craig-y-Nos will bo Xt autumn < 41l b fuvorab) Now hero is a good illustration of the | the mame of tho woman he loved. The | by Irvieg. ad of sum that Why! b maerful i American system of ation, Here is | shutters are never opened in that wonderful | Miss Addlla B i @ buds to odorous 1 ily lap th What wo mean when wo say that the peo- | house, the carriage has never been used, no | ral Life" company and has made Of mazy petals and undreamed-of ors to play it. Nothing $ § plo govern this country. Wo mean that | feet have dauced in the ball-room; butitind | dy Deviue Lot as June ¢ the gossip birds spoke quite 50 much enjoyment as a | awarded first p! any person in tho state, "who has any view | the solitary man are there us evidences of the Jonnie Yeamans will be with E true!) 1 once saw in Martin € Wt about the government, may, without fmpro- | fact that'a love can so completely fill the | piran again next season,having al At D great roses brush her knees, Richeliew' is the | special favorite rioty, express that view, develop it, and try | heart that all life is nott vithout it. iy Camille,” “Ar \ 0 iipress it on the administration. ' Mr. Mo — - YR S Y E T I et o June {5 a maid whose virgin says: “‘Bast | dalen L ( s Vickar wus not a member of either house of The play which Mrs. L er will pre- | o th Ma Al Wit SpANG R SuIY 1 With truth and innoceu ¢ ly than any | ways interested the ture, Because such men as he ave | seat on her fivst appearance at the Broady gon “‘.v’»‘;mm‘-'r«\“w»‘m Pitou at L 3 ver say Uha e in which Othello’ is m; t not members of legislatures, peoplo of Eu- | tyeater next November is named “The Ugly | Siticoe In Canada, A § ior child nor ) back h ldren is so | suld W. B, Gurl ut 1 ropean breeding howl and complain that edu- | Duckling.” It represents phases of the most | ~ Mr. Lawrence Barrett {s expoctod back | “To both that ¢ "0 . RO Lo g e B AT R L 1 cated men are not interested in the govern- | fashionable society in New York, and is the | from Europe carly in June. He is in the best s hows. had \ the first time I saw ¥ what influence v desperate woma ment of this country. Dr, McVickar was | work of Paul M. Potter. Mr. David Belasco | of health and spirits, Most like her dearest penr, an wicld over & man who is really not bad at insly hor, Souus 108 8, Feally better cwployed than he would har e | s already bogun to rehearse it Louls Jumes will add “Macbeth" to his J A half-unfolded, thir id of “Othello,” I | heart.” -y

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