Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 14, 1890, Page 19

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i : 1513 Douglas Street. A : H O S P B i J R o 1513 Douglas Street. LOOK AT THE PRICKS FURl | IR ‘ ‘ | | SEE the Variety of FINE GOOD3 ’ § o1kt i CHRISTMAS PRES ¥ 4 e n IF Yis bl of wespitls Hoi FOR LADIE PRESEN I S Artist’s Proof Etehing, framed, 83, 84, AR b S T and up. Steel Engravings, framed, 81, o J0 Plush, Wood, Silver, Gilt Cabinet iday presents for Husband, Son, Toilot Boxes, Handkerchiel Cases, 1% CABIN I PRl $2, 83, #4, % and up. M\\'mm- Color (1‘:;:=|:~~?’1T'~;tv\'\‘n.l:x nh:;,;- Stones and Tur- Brother or Sweetheart, the following Glove Cases, Work Boxes, Cuff and Col- C ol FRAMK Paintings, framed, 83, 84, 85 and up. T BRESENTS IN - MUSIC — Vi i 4 R o o " 0 4 5 RESENTS N MUSIC Violi list will give you valuable suggestions lar Boxes, from $2.00 upwards. " Pastel Pictures, §2, 83, $1, 85 to §25. s 1 US! folins In Plush, Wood, 8ilver, Gilt Cabinet ainti ad, M. from $2 up. Guitars, 8 and up. Ban- and approximate prices. Any of the Albums, Booklets, Sachet Cases, Pl TR ke A Paintings, framed, 2 to i : WA A oy PRESENTS IN EASELS — Bamboo jos, %5 and up. Mandolins, 88 and up. following will muke handsome snd ap- Chamois Noveltios, in this line prices Frames, set with Rhine Stoncs and Tur- Easels, 75c to #10. Oak, Mahogany, Zithers, $10 and up. _Autoharps, $ and propriate presents: range from 25¢. upward. quois, from 50c to $5.00, Gilt and Brass Easels, 81 to $20, up. Music Boxes, #1 to $100. Music Artists Oil Colors in Japanned tin PRESENTS 1N SOREENS-— Onk, SP se SreTe B boxes complete from $3.00 upwards. i‘il;‘;ggunv and Bamboo Screens, $2.60 § BINDERS, ROLLS, B1C. IT LEADS ] s G A FINE LINE OF INSTRUMENTS. THE NEW SCALE 28 EMERSON o : g 4/l T A IHave been sold by us for sixteen years, and no complaints Has the Highest Endorsement. / AL M 3 g b ; iy from any one A Clean Warrantee for 5 Years {1 18 L : Hallett-Davis Piano DEFIES COMPETITION. : | N = ‘ : In the market for fifty years, Call and Be Convinced. A HOSPE, JR,| iflllli | Vs lf |A- HOSPE, JR. 7,000 IN USER. i | ’ Al | KIMBALL ORGANS _ AN LEs 5,000 SOL.D. Sold On EaSY Payl’l‘lents Q 5 S — : "fu The best orga:nmdc, which we offer on monthly pay~- ments, LIBERAL DlSUOUN‘T’ FUR BASH. \ , £, B ~ = = mom]‘;I':\NOS RENTED-—Rent to apply as part purchase 1513 Douglas St.,, Omaha MADAME PATTI--Endorsing the /Vmu Scale Kimball Piano. 15613 Douglas St’ Omaha ) [ T Y white form of a woman bathing. It was | the Nemean lion, the Lerwan hydra, the D ) NAN AH outlaw hiding his identity, while “\“A WO‘MN‘S EXC[ (’F dozen 1olls, 1,028 dozen coolios DEL] A I\ + | Beth-Sheba, the wife of Urlah the Hit- | golden-horned stag, the wild boar, the cen- I\ « | some were sure he was some white captive )\ Vs U Ls Xl | doughnuts, 1,474 pies, 1,1 01 tite, and' ‘“sho was beautiful to { taurs and all the rest of the nuisances of that had grown up amone the Indians, while anany other odiblos; alk : look upon.” David evidently looked toolong. | those days. But the classic profile aud bare others refused to take any stock in the story work. We have filled “orders for saluds Every lxl)fly km.w-«" the zn'quc;l. and to \lvn;xt arms of o u'.}nll and belleved it an Indian trick, for no How Its Ob Has Boon X a 11 ;fl(}f‘:;(\'v“md\“ hes, :vlluw“ (nl]flll{(vm needld ¥ : s numberless complications this moonlighf 1OLE, DAUGHTER OF EURYTUS, $ed § other purpose than to scare the white people. ts Object Has Been Misunderstood b vork, ete. © are sor hat Juck of spaca Raarles Stewart Pamell Stands with Right | BUmDerless, compiations @ s Fh | were too st for Hersutor. and his wife to | 168 Religion Orases N‘n, 8 New, Thing, || oeher DUrposo than to scare tho e oo e, | 0% ) Y | foroidls our doing as wo would with Royal Company. prelude. For his sin the sword never de- | prevent any serious complications sent the Among the Tndians, lived, and_the army was mot called out to Many Peoples m o the funey work and art departs parted from his house and evil was raised up | herc arobe which corsumed his fiesh and he suppress tho fanatics. ment. We cannot show gcods to an ade against kim out of his own hom sailed away from a troubled world in a thun- Judge Foster of this city, who spent many vantage, neither ecan we take carq A great mimy years ago there stood in | der cloud. years of his lifo among the Indians, says such COMPLISHED, | ©f them as we should. Weo would solicit a WE MRS, O'SHEAS OF OTHER AGES. | 10,8 the lomay capitol a gentieman of | - A molancholy example which Mr. Parnell | DANCES HELD IN_ THE EARLY FIFTIES. | J00R 00 o e not atait inroquent. | THE WORK IT HAS ACCOM more generous patronage of all departments. good addvoss and luentof - spocch, engineer. | might have romombered is found n the case nginos I Jomor i thoy —— and thinks there was notthe least cause for aue b "["I*"l is a pernunent fund ing, with as great skill as the Ivishleader | of Touis XV. Louis is reported to have A & s alarm in the recent ghost dan :es and Messiah s 3 % hich would yield us un income as anassured Gow Man, from Sardanapalus to Sir | ever displayed, a campaign for office and hid- | had a faithful = wife, plain but good | They Were V Much Like Those | stories. The judie says that according to re- | The Willing But Needy Hands Tt Has | busis fo vork. ing his p\n]lmpumlur @ copions flow of tears | and ho himself is spoken of as having been Which Are Exciting the Copper port the dances near Pine Ridge are ve Kept Busy and the Hungry ‘The \ 's exchange is no longer an ex= Charles Dilke, Huas Blindly over “dead Cesar's wounds,” Mare Antouy | “anusually decent” till he came to an age 3 i X tamoe affairs compared with some he saw in Mortals Whom It periment and it is hoped some plan may ba sartered Kingdoms for .| had when he should have bec hamed to be Colored Enthusiasts at Montana in 1863, which contmued for = 4 devised for adding to the annual subsciptions = e SOWN HIS WILD OATS anything else. But alas, there was a Pomp- Pine Ridge Agency. seve months, and thousands of In- Has Fed, a sum which will provide aregular income to & Woman's Favor, in his 3 antiful cr vas dour, and poor foolish Lonis, in spite of the diaus took part in them., He was a meet the ordinary expense and thus relieve in his youth, and a plentiful erop it was, too, and 1 1 V if the published accounts are correct, but at \\'m'l‘lli\ \)hu')Id .‘)\r] )Ills‘ ‘m\lnl-nn:lniu hl‘\" o ) chll’l‘m'nullul nl z‘x:m-hm u.l.-,l l‘l;lp\luy of the :[l:‘ul.);:.‘,:::. of »‘Ix ||:ul; |: ;::iwl-n" ul u;uuul:hu twenty-five he was presumed to have settled | spection with whici he should have ¢ 2 G Sl £ A e government, anc e thought of danger in The fo AN 38 tho Penort of Mrs TRt 01 <o of 50 use henevolent work. eshrew my heart. hut it iswondrouss Sown Y ato reapoatablo" Teomin . eitisene | Mimself us the head of a family, allowed him- | =~ Newmska Crrv, Neb, Dec. 9.—[Speclal | Coiuootion with the frenzied dancers never [ - The following s the FnoL: 0% .\‘( -hr e | Beforo closinz this report [ wish to extend ure there is sumething more than wit ship, and until he appeared in his | self tobe captured by her wiles. What vivid Tur Bee]—Religious fanaticism, or | gceurred to them. In fact the Induns were "'1‘1”1, _fll rman of the commi RL0L W iy aing thanks to the members of the in ther ration over 3 v of Ceosar | Sketehes the keen sativists of the time have as it may be termed, among the In- [ allowed to conduct their different dances | Woman's exchunge to the Woman's Chyistian | board for their patience, forbearance and Chat masters ev'n the \\l~| st of us all fawous oration oy the body of Ca e P, W " " ’ oy helpf: % Rowe: Jane Sho; had been steadily climbing “the ladde -\\;\\ n‘Hhu l‘ul'l'\’;lhlul\|||um:ra;h mr l}n«l‘n}ni i is mot a new thing, according to the \\'x(')luu ufnlx'um;n the !(u't.k i e association : l'll::l-lllvlu D e n . o unexpressod | He had shown himself a brave soldier dur- | aux Cerfs surrounded by a bevy of beautiful ontiorsmo: an fight- [ . One of the dances was known as the “Med- |~ Of all philanthropic work conducted by s 0 express my thanks to eact VHRMTEE Ay Rare heen thie EaRDress “, ing the war in Syria, and in the three years' | irls who had beenstolen from their nowes for of old frontiersmen and Indian fight- | ; i;03,n00, which was for the purpose of women ke, i mroportion to its valuo ty | ©f the emploves of the oxchange for the trospections or retrospections of the author |t ok inst Aristobulusin Paléstine, | his delectation. History has no more unique i 2 making braves, and was going on in_sight of [ WOmen, per 2l REUDSY 5 VAU 9| respect and courtesy shown me toroughout theselines ho embodiedn truth of which | GRS GG oman troops. thyough & | Picturo than that of’ the dissipated old [ Early in the '50's—abont 1852 or v of the fort, - Several ladius, Wives of oficors, | @ community, there is none so wanting in distory abounds in oonfirmations. It may be | series of brilliant victories. Such bravery | monarch teaching these —girls Fort Kearney at ) s ono of | were stoppingut the fort,'and exprossing il | recognition as that of the Womaw's exchango | [im arateful for the gool work they havo Jaid to have come in with our first garments i military «k:u ”hml he :I‘N.m.wd under ;nmm AR the principal frontier stations, a religious | desire rl:l’l\o‘«;'{;::l:)‘: :"lll:tl(]iil:: da "‘l‘\'u ‘\f:"“l(';‘)‘i— movement, This, we feel quite sure, is .ll\“- done and Ij-wllw‘unl‘nl--:": ;I:;n"::_.- l{:u:m: 1.1‘“::; . U Sanl ,in his Gallie wars, that the imperial | cerning himself for v oiteny gty B varh i om to the place, The making an ignorance regarding its work as also bespeuk fe snceossor 4 sud bids fair to last until the race lm_nun its butcher had made him & tribune of th!‘xno- THEIR SPIRITUAL WELF. gn\um‘m, took possession (3[Ilu, various In raves” consisted in pussing @ sharp to m.lp\()l |'u Ivtp,vl n. 4 g f I s support and consideration tourse, Indeed, the latest illustrious ex- | 1% fater, the governor of Italy. An- | IMultitudes of ludies, we are tol c: dian tribes of Eastern Nebraska, and the | pointed stick through the fleshy part of tho | 12rgely to the very nature of the work itself. | thut yas ulways been shown me, smple may derive a peculiar satisfaction from | {ony's ‘poli decidedly in the | didates for positions in this Parisian b craze was tot unlike that which has for the | young buck’s breast. To the stick was fa lucting its business with benevolent mo- tho reflection that our common forefather | nscendant till he undertook the restoration of | and tho history of the govornment ut this | pust fow months caused troublo at Pine | ened a long rope, and tho othor endof which | tives, nov for its own good, but for thut of ThoKADG 00 DANTa ory dosir i swhore be- | Ptolemy Auletus to the throne of Egyptand | period is little more than a history of the | yii o » agencies. The Nebraska | W3 slivped with a noose to the topofa | those who seck its ald, it When Tagliont and Ellslor, Ay st & vory dodirablo position somewhore bo- | CHlomy AWRIES 6 K08 tHNORe o8 BEYPUAN | Ghanges of the k mistresscs. What a | Ridgo and other ngencies. The Nebrasku |y, 55 milon” the "dance was o, The e When Togtlont nnd, Blisior, the) Enaigegn iween. the Tigris and iuphrates by yielding | Se M it elt S Yo clilhitress hiad | pair of shears were thoseof Pompudour, | tribes and theiv religions zeal, however, dif- | el who could pull with his torn and bleed. | 10t be governed o judked by st dancers of the duys of our grandfathers, wera %0 a similar temptress on a memorable ocea- | ooy Lublicly known as the mistress of the | From harmless mediocrity the monarch do- | fered from the recent Indian excitement in [ ing body hardest and lougest and danco | business standards. A - prime motive at the height of their fame they v sion, great Ciosar years before and the additional | generated into an object of ridicule for gods | that they had suficient food and conse- | around the pole was a “big brave;” but the | theexchange is todignify labor, and how cau That marvelous character of whom we de- | fact that Le was the spouse of a most estim- ;Hvul e -1“'1':5 ;"m{"\, Lo ‘.1‘1%!;'(-4 upon | quenitly less causo to excite apprehension uumumnnlnm} or, d;up[h n the noisy | it better be dono than by lighted to hear in boyhood, Samson, could, it | able wife, Octavia, were forgotten, and the | his devoted hed. h:"“Ail:s:} :I}:‘l’,lh:)llylll‘.‘} ¢; | among the traders and 4 Jlta v afterwards known as squaw men. he wero alive, sympathizo with him. The | Ereat Antony, orator, statesman and war- | L@ FHRTIIE Re piivke demoralized and | Durme oneof the visits of a trader, a mau | 4 i Eee B MOSTE BEOKS REEEE : o op biblical character Laa no Tory party to con- | "™ e scatiored tho navy, ana Voltaire and Kosscau | Bmed Dennison, to the cvmp of tho Otoes, a4 | wiiness the duco did not. remain long, and | e~ you really- resn o moady | SYIPhIto Taglioni’s most charming baliet, tend with; o lberal nllis to conciliste and | with a laueh and held out his wrists to b | IBELed out of existence ail respact for | A% HE R NOURGG Cltyt Gl i | falating retivod drom tho sickontng sigit. R s S e T T and it was of Ellsler's dancing that, as we 1s not recorded as having made any struggle | bound—a slave, ecnmeshed in the net of the | HUFE OF stite and paved the way for the noers of the lolges were found éngaged | Anothor method of making braves cou | tho bepefits of the exchange.” ! know, Margaret Fuller said to Emerson, for homo rulo o rulo of any sort, but bo was | “aceursed Beyptiun.» Frail human nature | PR30l N s conducted a prayer meet. | n i oxciting velizious soance, consisting of | Sk iy whioh fopo. was. fastoneds Wnch | yorond g UCaton We tnwor: Wo have | uatr. Emerson, it s rligion.” S i gt find wmany excuses for Antony, for it |+ e . ke awila and frenzied cirele dance around a o s y helped many needy, worthy women, and in Iixuctly what the tempestuous Margaret man of great strengthand had an imperi- | ¥ 3y ing iu the Pare aux Cerfs. b buffalo head attached to the other end. Ir| filc - x - u argarn . My s said that ), 2 center lodge, The trader was not allowed to ¢ preventing others eating the bread of des | paant I») this ph has never been eertain, ous way of overriding opposition, carrying ey In Centrat park, New York, stands a full o Al . e to | the young Indian could thus drag thehead | FONAHCAE BB Gl ance that our w : i L s Sl nie b uron Basnelyonst: lenath statue of ' man whou America do- | BIPEOUCL, b idgernedtiiausketindians wore! |40, BE el intinco Morl: aboul e tmilaic o f (Ko asenyre, HAVLBSIN RN gk G WOIR, | b felvory el i i .;'\ll::‘:h that 1s burnt, overcoming ; - fn the market pliaco did St al tights to honor, but whose locks, If notshorn: | Who was iuside the lodge. Denulson failed | Wos considered agreat bravo, otherwise he | It must bo remembered that' we aim ut o | theso distinguished philo-ophers kept in REMARKABLE PIILISTINE MAJORITIES o ”'l’m.l m‘3;11.“.-:.&\-v:nml::u vie greatness. Boston, too, has n marble me- | t0 geta sightof the individual and left the | fo) -1:-u‘ly N ara s lmuhx“mmm tran | Digh standard of work, particularl > | pot in their front windows, and it does un- e 5 T : fau SIUID AP $00y, 5 ! Waletor ve e | camp, but returned with several companions P 5 depariment, and cannot take in- | questionably Ik woll for the dignity of and conceiving and carrying out other radi Apd made agap In nature, morial of him and on the pedestal is insceribed ufew days later and found the dance still inflicted wounds. It was considered a icles, even though the one offering Ellsler's steps, They were, Lm > Ful cal mousures in @ somewhat Parnellin was anathor, loug before the days of | [lexander. Hamiltou=Orator, Welter, Sob- | oiily on) many of the InZians having fatlen | 2eligious duty. from which mone shrank, and | glem bo very destitate, and we aresometimes ) Salen SN 10 e @l fashion, Whother, in these days, he would | it e U " il MOl oscondod from a | ber has seldom assailed a loftier head, out of ihe circle through exhaustion, and | ¥ A0 DR WY L BT N B P ive | compelied to ask others, who do not need aid, ro of our own polkas, and so far re- have carried his Jawboue of an ass mto tho | NAMS sl Heultumiss Sdesconded fram a | o8 A SO R ereon churactorizes | Some had reached such a state that death ro | Bio U A in "tha hanpy Tunting | 19,cousien certain articles of food whie A e U ies S v g 3 B ! 008> 4 3 kv e ad, The g odic 2 ad de- ] vill_reach our standard. Let atl unde Qiectivos cotld g 1 ranks of the lundlords or pulled down the | sors;" of u civilization which looms dimly up [ with the title of "Coiossus of the Auti-ite- | Sulted, “The gteat wodicine waw hd Qe | grounds, Tho excitoment doring these dances [ Wi o St han wo have s needy constamor | Lok, Adiectives coull never oxpress, to_ tha supports of the house of commous is | tous through a deep wist of years, majestic | publican Party,” whose genius origmated the | PAFeC ARG to SIS ol Mot ob 08 LAEY | was *intenso and the Indiuns were crazier | Wiio‘can o the work as woll Jas o 1note | Soreo, wmtt 1s dicated by the workings of 4 4 4 The Samson’s | and mysterious; of a time when the ovied | policy which made possible the greatest re- 10, 9 " than the ghost dance could ever make them, AR SEa o 3 o ave the work gi pote{ e o ot vg d : ' matter of speculation. The tale of Samson’s s [l I lt i ; ! ',h ,,’, f u,," h L 'l li oas 1d \\I'Ix.l‘:llllltl'“nd’\mu'l' agent o ‘n:loxl‘\:lq'hwll \‘1&5 ho gt 1 l favored sister, she will have the work given \H}vnl:(‘)' ‘\‘Illlllll‘“ I‘.’I‘ll:ln ’l“:l\‘;:l‘xlj;v:;;l‘u[\:::l |(l“l’\"l: glory was told and the scroll laid away when, | Iil1a of Gecoer syl Moty weve, noamod by | R 6 Nt mob, whibsh. heitizant | Siah, and that he bad appeared {o nearly all AT T T T herto o, No ono who has ot been i the | beck in the valley of Sorvk, ho loved a woman. | fa¥efe atdthe Blernol 1y Aad Bob DRehN | Gasihat the British redoubis at Yorktown put | the indian tribes along the Missouri rive R DA RoIane NEXH. work can understand the many perplexing omowhat difforent is thodaucingof today. Then came the shears of Delilah | Assyriuns was sh (,‘mb the shears of Deliluh. .| to shame his French allies, who stood first in | 1€ bad visited the Omahas and Pawnees be 3 ahue, questions that have to bo decided and the | mhe French and ITtalian schools of the balle % iR 7 A s 1y V40 810 : R e { histime. whose writ. | fore he appeared to the Otoes, and less | The daylizht wane id the aight I8 near, amount of detail required for its systematic | pave been crowded to the rear of the stage sud the world hss the wondor- | Whata magnificent herltage was bis; the legal profession of hlstime, whose write | 4,0 %5 “oole later . information came he russet leaf hangs restloss on the tree. administration. by tho English and Spanish, and skirt d fully pathetic pleture of the blind A LINE OF IMPERIAL ANCESTRY. loge sy m"".II‘i::‘l’m::fll:;"l:m‘l‘.‘:“.‘r‘:““X&:'r"v text | from the Pawnee ecountry that the | Thestubbled fields are brown, the meadows [ At the close of any year's work it i3 not | gud tho ballerina reign togother, giant trailing his clanking shackles the | reaching thirteen centuries into the past; the | pPC holI Gud the prints of her fners | Ereat doctor was leadiug that tribein adance, [, sere o L e | only fitting, but profitibie, o roview (> mec- | poses and gyrations, gracoful and char weary round of the tread mill stately civilization of Nineveh and theintel- [ goo, P98 PG F0F PIEEE 80 BEC HREES 1 and among them joy 'was unconfined. A adiagalisnce mate oy il & 9= | ord and noto all that has been encouraging as | s they ma 4 lly bo sald to The royal wakrior of Israel of whom it is | lectudl empire of the world. Stray frag- | Litr caught him. . Before the imperiousuess | He told his dusky followers that ho who | Tiie'winter cometh and the night s near, well as discouraging, all the successesas well | yyte a'veligion, In fact, there is the strong- his £ b out into all lands, | Ments only of his tragic history have come | 5 no nerfoct, ravishing beauty, did he bow | C4Me after bim would turn the earth into a e T e E R i as all the failures, and so gain knowledge for | ot veason ngainst it, 1 -ul&l":m;v, \s”ulm« \vm‘l ou“llln u((Il a0dS, | down to us, Byron has given us a picture: his haughty head; no perfumesof the orient | BAPPY hunting g rlll}\d. and the Indian should e T ot e e i A B WAL, o il te tiworke’ in Vdays to s0me I'rlm pust | pased upon some defined and universal prin- and the fear of him was upon all nations, was sominate heart ther stole - Caway s Boul o fine Cspan | have. everything bétter than even fancy R-ORR S year has scen many weary hours of service, | ciple, whereas Almost every one of thé mod. DY oy soul; e spun vers wold ) 3 . | ciple, whereas almost_every one of the mod conquered by the trick of @ smile. His long | A 88 courage which corr ks or " cloth of 'gold enmeshed | could picture; tho white people would all The irds ‘are gone that checred the fading | Many days of anxiety as to the outcome for | o dancors. with skivts and castanets ane life passed to the ringing of steel shafts on b Bt enorglos his limbs while languid luxuriance | urn whence the ame ‘und the aborigines o B3 the months as v came and went. Sick- | pounces that she is the inventrix of her own brazen shielas. “He smote the Philistines oo Dubaot drowned o deep volmroved: | lulled him into @ dream heaven, | WOuld again reign sugreme. The ‘great( The shoep are huddied n the shelter! ness und death have been in the fumilios of { gteps, . from Giboon even to Gazer.) Moab | . noss. ! deep YONPEWOUST | 1 Tus Maria Reynolds—illiterate Maria | medicne man” was eonsidered by the Indians | o S0 g1 wo some members of the exchat Some | ~Ouiro and Carmencita have both enjoyed and the Moabites met him and were [ If born a peas son u mun Reynolds, the wife of an adventurer. In | 48 immortal, and they fiymly belioved ut the | RAT R R b AT biava boen ahsent froin the rent deal of | e sweets of Amcricau popularity, but the Bk ary erass before tho flames. Irom the | To have reached an emplr %, whi ary of ‘the- treasury, Mr, | time that his promises “Wwould be fulfilled, | b BEISETE BUHOTEIES BT AT the time, and otiors perk s0me | Intest fashlountlo admiration is the Eankareo time the death missive of Goliah, the giant His death gives us ahint of his life. He had miltou admitted his frailty in one. 'of the ey bad no knowledge of his first appear- v 1ok akios Bre clothad i hreoses g | of thalr enthusiasm for the dance, which 15 attracting large audiences in whistled from his sling untilat & good old | been snaved by the “Ionic eyes” of Myrrha | most remarkable confessions ever published o smong the Indiuns, but claimed to have | my,'sefoum flows undur the nubumnid trews © | S0me have stood nobly iu tholr pluces, and 10 | Now ¥ age hedied, full of days, riches and honor [ and by & politician, In future disasters en- dof hiw for seretsl Fears proviousto bls | “And sy shows tha sorrow of thuls dseny, | tew fn & graat meawiro 1s duo the grittfylng 16 was olad 1n breastnlate and_ helmet and Would not yleld itered by himself and his party, and | COmIng to the Otods Xhe tidings of his | There is nosound to soothe, no sight toplease, | results of toda, re glad that at” the s vars wore viotorious, But David, to his | Even for the sake of all that ever stirred ven in the causes which led to the duel, can | COming was sent from the tribes to the south, | The night isnearand frost s in the breeze. close of tho year weara able to rcport our | ohpracteristic is that it is indescribable, It rrow, had a weakness for the soft lightof a [ 4 manareh into uetion, to forego discovered tho work of the shears. and they all expected him with sincere I fast and elouds are in the sky; exohangro froo from debt. ° have nov only { Gomands much gymnastio ability, and is pe Sari oja and tae Hpple of dusky hair over | A 1I0InE rove ; Within the experience of Mr. Parnell one | f8ith. "By = those who saw him the sl Siluds Ao In the ek¥s ho | pald ull tho running expenses, but have | formed with auduoiy mad vohorsanss 1t Mo dark ey and the ripple of dusky ha > All the glovy of his ancestry was forgotten A AL “great medicine man was described 1 been able to pay the note for 00 which we Y f Rt the white gleamn of a woman’s should 3 prominent figure occupying the same arena, (4 was described, % 1 pay # uses up silk and laceat a rate that must make O mignt fa Jerusalom 'ut the- time when | 10 the velvot caross of the pink hand of bis | Bl neured with a suddenness that. was | SOBLFary t0 the regulation spirit agent, as not With moistene.l locks the white moon rides on | borrowed from tho sssoclation, Mr. McKinloy break inton broakdown of ¢ slave. hen all had been lost he rified the AFec ¥ . 0 ! an Indian at all, but & dark skinned, long hizh, Wo have labored hard to accomplish this | Jiznted imitation. 1t is danced by Miss Bdith kings went forth to battle, David walked on 00 of ils treasure: @ (4 1 startling. Everyone remembers the story of f T / i i Seattering her thin rays on the breezes cold h ighted imitation. 1t is danc by Miss Edit palace of its treasures and in the court built | oo ey T o o rig v ¢ | haired, Texas Jack appearing indiviaual who | , S¢a g hor thin ray AR - | #nd it has been nnceasing labor Hanand aud it 4a 1ot ot ealldon HILLEE the oof of the royal palace to b ® funeral pyre of bis richest furniture and | Sin, Gharles Dilke's iutrigue with Tady | Lo yave huen of ahy age betwoen forty | 4vind amid the sorrow and I eigh-— Every day In the year excepting the Sab- | fonward, aud It is nov 4 roligion. Hut th ALONE WITIE HIS THOUGHTS, aftor draiing one_ draught to tho memory | Colin Campbell, He was a leader in society, | Might have bwen of, Wy age botwoeen forty | Ay Lifo s chill, and clouds ure 1'the sky. B e e i | omage o tho entiro ity is al tho duncer’s L 3 ’" & power o8, Wi saav 3 y. 2 Appenr o 28 10 B hath and olidays, some of the | feet. Thore wasto bo n battlo in the moming | of many dloyous banquer past burned biui- v e, within casy slght of the | §igforent Indians and announced the coming T e Se———— 1adies have boen In the exchanyo rooms, aud the streets of the eity were f self with his concubines, 8o died Sardanap- i stato . PRl " ¥ 3 > shei of Delila At cork. | of the Indian redeemer at an eariy day and <Ay s, “ % A In the lunch department we have suc Swiftne: s Mackerel. with his . chariots sud | horsemen, | alus and with bim thirteen bundred years of | $uthe sheirs of Delilah had been at works | § on'lo himself disappeared, the Tndiuns be- | - Underground London is far more won- | cuded hest. - Many encouraging words have Wiftness of the Mackerel foot soldiers and archers, Ho could hear be* | empire. I + ors o owilit- | leving that he roturned to tne spivitworld, | derful than underground Paris. Tako, | hoon spoken to us and many have shown | Tho Spanish mackerel, with it low him the murnur of voices 1 the tents s contributed a victim, The son | #8410 the premiership, faded from the polit- | MG foh: W0CUEN S G e Rdulgad In | for example, its 8,000 miles of sewors, 1ts | their approciation of our work by their con- | smooth, cone-shaped body, is among and around the campfires the clanking of ter and Alemena le still an infant $ AL Wazrow by the Indians, who patiently awaited the | 84,000 miles of telegraph wires, its 4,500 | stant pationage. the swiftest of fish-s. and for speed only lrlnulr r.:::: n,\lt-bm.l.l..m-.,l lnmt"l;mg 1“' n,‘.l, :;::ml ln)nnl.nl;x‘y n'.l,ixll:‘-d 1()“‘1»"51--;;1;%)&: FRANK ATKINSON. \‘um\ll\u (i.lf ml.e great m]' 1‘1, but it came not, | miles of water mains, its 8,200 miles of \?\'-;mnv a corps w’I five hired l\‘vmkm-m for | finds a parallel in the dolphin, There is war hos 0 palaces about him loome y Juno_to des . Clad — o, finally the craze died ont. ras pined, all dofinitaly fAxed. Ye! this dopartment, and it isa_task to always | o great s \ ape be up in the bluo mooulight, palo and ghost like | robe of Minervaand the golden breast plate Chiok Taics B aasinad. "o sbrange pArs of tho afTatr was that the | 08 Pipes it deflnllely flxed. Yot mot | LU SUEENIOR, Dltined aud carriod oo har. | o, S1oab simillarity 1o shupe betwo snd afar off amoug the barren rock-faced | of Vulcan, armed with the sword of Mereury | o HECE RS CRIEEIE ST “great medicine man” was never seen by any | 1 T benanth the feet of the ned. | moniously. “We served during th AR L LI ASh G (e T HOE RO M hills be could seo the glitter of gold whero | and the' bow of Apoll and hading | Bome Bve b 8ur- | white man, and the latter had many conjec- | 1078g0 ar:a beneath the feet of the ped- |y, ches, wveraging cighty per day. yacht. 10 first follows the fustes! bristled the spear of the hosts of the foo he | the reius over the horses of Neptune he | geons or horse doctors in tures s to who the individual was, Some | estriun. In Oxford and Regent streets | yad pinety-three consignors, who haye ? | Bteamers with the greatest ease, in its was 10 meet in the moring, But across the | swept. through the world like a whirlwind, | have signed o puper condemning tight [ thought he was some lusane trapper or | alone the capacity is sald to exceed 140 | plied the exchange with 6,731 loavesof bread, | dashes swimming st five times their court the king’s eye fell upon the shbining | Every boy kuows how easily he disposed of | check reins, bunter ; others thought he was some | acres, 2,220 loaves of Boston brown bread, 2,131 | speed. } ——— an amountof homage that it stivs the b ven 0 now to ;ml about, says the Phladelphin woman to dignify her own labor by c Times, hody, porhaps Mr. ing it tosome practical use, Who Howells, recollects what Thacl felt for k. Iv appears for ten minutes in cach act of & certain play, and to most peoplo foris the play's enief attraction. [ts chiof

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