Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 23, 1893, Page 17

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. PRI OMAHA OUNDAY "BEE "~ NS TWENTYSECOND YEAR. ] OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 23, 1893—TWENTY PAGES. ' i NUMBER 208, BABY ON FIRE WITH ECZENA Babies burning up, babies in agony from iteching and burning eczamnas and other torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly and blotehy skin and scalp diseases. None but mothers realize how these little ones suffer when their tender skins are literally on fire. To know that a single application of the CUTICURA REMEDIES will in the great majority of cas2s aford instant relief, permit rest and slesp and point to a permanent and economical (because most spesedy) cure, and not to use them is to fail in your duty. Think of the years of suffering entailed by such neglect. Years not only of physical but of mental suf- fering by reason of personal disfigurement. oy} Everything about these great skin cures, blood purifiers and humor e L s T il emedies inspires confidence. They are absolutely pure, and : 3 Titese twelve beautiful babics have heen cured of the most torturing and dise L E F y bsolute I g 1 m 1y be figuring of skin, scalp and blood diseases, with loss of hair, by the CUTICURA REME- sed on the youngest infant. They are agreeable to the most refined DIES after the best physicians and all other remedics had failed. The story of their 55 sufferings is almost too painful for recital. The days of torture and nights of agony and sensitive. They afford instant relief and a speedy cure when the from itching and burning eczemas, and other skin, scalp and blood diseases, Add best physicians, hO'SpllulS and all other rem:dies fail, and constitute to this the terrible disfigurement, and life scemed, in most cascs, scarcely worth the living. But these cures are but examples of hundreds made daily by the CUTICURA the most effective external and internal treatment of skin, scalp and REMEDIES, They may be heard of in every town, village and cross-roads. Grateful f 3 : ; mothers proclaim them everywhere, In short, CUTICURA works wonders, and ita blocd diseases of modern timss. Parents, rem=2mbz2r that cures made Gires oh ! 10ng the moat! marvéllous of thia of asly ae of medicine, " 76! Know! (At in infancy and childhood are speedy, economical and permanent. LGB ARG et L B R R L e Uil i R i y % ] y ’ afford instant relief, permit rest and sleep, and point to a permanent and economical N, B.—Since a single cake of CUT{CURA SOAP, costing 28 cents, is (because most speedy) cure, and not to use them without a moment's delay, is to faid sufficient to test the virtuss of thssei graat curatives, there is now no in your duty. Cures made in infancy and childhood are speedy, and permanent. rzason why hundreds of thousands should go through life tortured, disfigured and humiliated by skin And scalp diseases, which are speed- CUTICURA REMEDIES are sold throughout the world. ily and permanently cured by the CUTICURA REMEDIES at a t#" “ALL ABOUT THE BLOOD, SKIN, SCALP AND HAIR,” Proparped by POITER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Boston. trifling cost. 64 pages, 300 diseases, 50 illustrations und testimonials. Muiled f:eo. THE l' “ Lr\ \l _\\ \\D “ 0“ \V on and the possibilities nlf prna lite. | past shame to view: 1.'ur to woman love w;-r P‘“.‘E THA] D“) \UT KIL] cnlrlu-«nvx(;unnl!m cted in the national museum | s -. vi ption of ;lm band at the ONNUBIALITIES, i i h Some years ago a young girl dwelling in a esire of self- fon and sou at Washington tup 10 support the shoulders. The isles many hours from the metropolis of O T very narrow, as are the double doors, und it | A Brooklyn girl jilted her flance because America was wooed, seemingly with honora- as for the woman between whom and this 3 seems a problem how the crinoline of our | he had his ‘golden brown mustache shaved ble motives, by a man of high social po- | sacrament of surrender stands memory with 7 Qne of the most, notable fontures of the | grandmothers could i omu odate 1self o | off aud then she didn'tlike his looks. Always Stoned While Man Goes Free, | man' disappeared, leaving & brand | iont and forgiving the world may be. Gait of the Thirtios. in England thero was no_pilot attached, but | fig water. 4 i Rt IOty ce gL seo WM MEOSCELY of shame upon the brow of the puor girl Woman has ever been man's teacher. For when the engine was placed in service on The cars, like the locomotive, are painted Sh t kl 1 1}' & he has taught him to believe that the Camden & Amboy road it was found | a rich olive green, and be tering of Invitations to church weddings in New She was taken away and years of bitter sor- | centuries she has taught him to believi e amden & Amboy road a8 foun ch olive green, g > ering o church we row, sharp agony und’ blinding remorae | he must plunge mto all sorts of excesses and bsolutely necessary to provide a pilot in | any kind, The conches w 230 pounds, | York City sometimes bring as high a sum as HOLDS THAT THERE IS NO SEX IN SIN | (5% il nors fallowed. The man, in the | immoralitics to bo attractive to hor. and as | GENUINE RELIC OF PRIMITIVE RAILROADING | orer to assist the machine in taking curves. | andl aro mere pismics besid the §0,000-pound | $10 each. meantime, married a lady 1o whom he had | reward he shoutd take a spotless creature to Mr. Steyens set himself the task of planning | Pullmans of the evening of the nineteenth | Thounmarried young peonle of McDonough been affanced; but when, one day, accident | wife, and if he reform after marriage he one, und ulthough it wus a crude and awk- | century. Iach conch has itsown br: G end forming a *‘matrimonial alliance, The Pootess of Passion Reenlls Instances of | brought to the knowledge of the young wife | should be canouized. But aurmg the last [ Triumphal Progress of a Plonesr Lo ward affair it served the purpose. The firat | and as the brake rods arc not fitted with | 1 Ohinet of the club fs to seenre sultuble Man's Keen Bufferings for Sins Com- the base action of her husbard during their | ce she has begun to teach nim that self- | tive and Cars to the World's pilot wasa frame made of oul, Sxd feet, | rachets or “shoes,” the sturdy musele of the | yughands and wives for its memb betrothal she left him, taking with her the | restraint is quite as possible for him as for S Gl e e pinned together at the corners. Under the | brakeman must hold the brake tight until o ey y mitted—>tory of Two Beautl- child he worshiped. Deserted and _dis- { her; and slowly but surely is man coming to 5 ! ““ 2 I-_;rv:'n'{l cnd wore s pair ;»r! u-l\Il«-"h‘%“'vm.\'l' l‘_ns grip is released the proper signal “” ““\';'I“ d l“l*“ are fl'whif"fl*lfl! Miss ful West Belles. graced this b surely tasted some of the | realize that he must not demand so muoh Pionoers Among the Crew. six inches in diameter, while the other end rom the man in the crow's nest. arl Ah, who has proposed to you now, bitter dregs of Meanwhile the wronged | ingaved so little in the way of .norals waus fastened to an extension of the axle out- rathers of Thel dear? — girl married and is Stable wifa todsy. | Whasever the eynio may say to the COntrary, side of the forward driving wheels, as it was Enthorsiof Thals. Ceatt, Atan engagement dinner given in New (Copyrighted, 1593.] This is a_woman's ve and in the | a higher and broader idea of morality and | The locomotive, Johin Bull with twoanci found that o play of about ono inchon each | Tt was pecullarly Alting that the crew | York on the. last of bachelorhood to The settled impression of the world seems | light which it casts upon_her pathway she | justice is taking hold of the minds of men. | g urrived in Chicago yesterday side of the pedestal of the front wheels was | which handied the train should b twenty-four bachelor fricnds, cach guesy to o that erring woman is always crushed | finds that she, as well as man, can progress | © When wo say that *the world countenznces | 1 . yesapds ne to get around the curves. Av | from the veterans of the servic founa akis plate miniature’ lady. Kan S & % b % s up and out of error. 1t is undoubtedly more | man's immoralities,” we seem to forget that | having completed the journey from J Y | first it" required a considerable pile [ Bailev, the conductor, has been u fair maid was different in feature, form an under her own shame and the scorn 0fman- | gimoy “for her to live down past folly than | the world is composed of women as well as | City to Jackson park over the Pennsylvania [ of stones to hold the pilot down | conductor since 1850." Joans Hagar, Pt o RO R kind, whilo the erring wnan goes free, | for her brother man, unless she is endowed | men, Women have never before educated | Central raiiroad in elghty-four hours. At | to its work and even thew it ls | fop” brakeman, was appointed to a like posi- | ciough to be ur s souvenirs an favored by women and admired by his own | with ain aplomb, which belongs to the | the conscience of men in the matter of the | 41 points along the route the venerable relie | & Mmatter of tradition tha t i had a pernicious ';‘ f ’l" ok Ml‘l I“' "(‘ i‘]-‘f‘, L suggestive of pos adv tyve of woman social evil, and conscience in these affairs is habit of getting off the track ou slight, | Brunswiols 10IRAR A SR UGE,TEOUT N Bishop Joseph 8. Key of the Methodist e T b e oyt e ler one | almost. entit e D Inr M OTAE Tailion: provocation. When the engine was to bo | man, first served in the same ca 3 pliop Joseol B Key or tho Mathopian Authors, preachers, poets ="}<|_ authors a "1{‘~‘l: 'L (-'.{“'“:{.fi,“‘"“”"‘}I':‘ “" "‘!:'. cation. Therefore, while only the excep- | crowds of young and old, and was inspected | turned the pilot had to be removed, as the | 1349, and is now a passeng rruml\ 3 | Hes Kidd of n, Tex. The unanimously express the opinion that ‘, K Stare iffap, | er a8 widely as the | G Ally refined man suffers in any degree | and examined by thousands. The young ve- entables ot tat day wero wo short 1o ac- | & Horbert, the engineman, w o 19 : erman, Tek g woman once fallen from her high and cha e > Y from the pangsof conscience, he certainly | garded the ancient machine »,k h | commodate it. The pilot which now adorns e T N AnniataL ; are girls who go wrong because they | from the - pangs o 100, 1 garded the ancient machine with as muc n ot Whioh & SELR Bl A LS @ s Wl AW, | trifo iaa brilliunt woman_sociully and fatels e i Snt fona sl rirls who are house: ) liko o ies, wve known a 0 lo s posi A e e ek St 8 B ouiiicd R LDl & ceeding app; escapos ull |;nn§shn_mlu \;‘- a s;vm_lur oy .nu7.“ulh:."«'u(!.’-.“.'u:.L.‘»‘.‘.\»“[fu- Rua fiqu“”l.tx tion in the business world, his social stund. | €us, while the graybeards rubbe: 1 thoir eyes | one first conatrusto. tho same _( wpacity in 1855, and s now e unlnll}mlu T AN RLRYRERAGmARY. ooks. ‘whocown g fallen | S by reak through the false restric- | ing, and Lo be expelled from his club as the | to determine whether their boyhood days Some Original Featuros, ReVepmcRanio suTRO MORAANB ROUE. L (o lh TRl el TRl Lt g woman figured, and never yot read omé | ;i " g their lives s pent-up | resultot a fall from virtue. Hiswife ob- | had come back. ‘The journey was a trium- | Wood was the orfginal fuel which made [ Dt Bakor. car inspector, entored the | (Erys LIGRE ROAL TR S CRBRECICEE which allowed her any future save death or | pjvers break through a dam. tained a divoree and took hev children to his | phal march 6 slow music—twelve miles an | the steam, but the furnace has been changod in 1849, and still holds this position. ““IL* enable jilted Green Mountain boys to resume the convent. If the malo sinner of the same | Again, others there are whose licensed | mother's home. He married the girl who |y 000 \wag the gait—and was attendel with | Bow for coal. The inclosed te 5 | R Smuth, acting assistant superintendent | business at some uzw stand with the ring 4 5 3 freedom of action, toge i crited | had been the cause of his fall, and the two ; £ 6 capacity for about 2,200 pounds of § ) neting assistant sy t & BaAs ket kind rec )y punishment at the hands of | freedom of action, together with sinherited O e e s pacity [ Sesr A FYant Buperintencent | siightly altered, & tendencies,lead to their downfall—tendencies | lived a life of absoluie social ostracism in | the pompand cereinony due this remnant of | o541 "and a° tank holding 1,500 gallons of | P¥¢ sty o Anitely ; the novelist, it is after a long and successful | (S ST bt have proved | their natwve city. He died in the prime of | primitive railroading. vater, The water is sufficient fora run of | Mt 1 foryeinor,) and chasd) - Apihasknever been defiplialycastiedByan caveer of pleasure and prosperity, and s | Yhich properly directéd might have proved | their native city. He died : : ; : o [ TR 2Rk SR filled nearly every position on the division at | how many of the young men who now go carcer of pleasure and prosperity, andis | fho'anchor for & happy home; many lifo, u victim of ‘romorse: awl even hisown | The appaarance of tho John Ball as it | thirty miles and the conl will lnst thvough ( (iiod Pary Guony Postiofon Bhoivision ot | how iy, of Mo wounk, en who how €9 usually @ sudden death in a railroad disas ough ignorance and curiosity; m fumily refused to uttend bis funeral, pulted wearily amid the massivs and orate | ninety. ‘Uhe curious contrivance, resem- | SOME ¢ g his i rogulrly o onucom roulds s el ter. igh moral viciousness mixed with vanity | It 15 a strange fact that 4 woman who has | 1,.005tives of today, furmshed a striking | Ding a poke bonnet, which surmounts the e afford so many good opportunities for maks All this, of course, so far as the woman | and avarice; hundreds through starvation | retire 1o e '“v‘*”’ follydncghe ahe Ilustration of the marvelous strides of rail. | tender was called the “gig-top.” In it sat i A prices paid by monopolies for labor; and a | of a respectable home is seldow mo ; : g L . goes, is an-excellent warniug to good young ie forward brakeman, who not only kept YWhit nd Oleveland, ing the better acquaintance of de € few, a very few, through misy Alove. her former male comrades in sin; whil roading in half a centu The John Bull is sharp lookout for other trains ap. The Waushington correspondent of the | young women who also go regula girls; but is it fair to the many women who |~ 1t'is the mercenary and viclous sinner who | man who attempts to reform and become a | 62 years of aze. It w s built by George | proached on the same track, but signaled to | New York Comme; dvertiser is author- | church 5 have already made one misstep? and is it | becomes most widely knowu to the world, | loyalhusband isalmost invariably persecuted | & ohoongon in England and lanied on these | the rear brakeman when the occasion r ity for the statement that President Cleve- ‘f“'r a rf‘:"‘""‘ ‘/'\'}‘lmlmn \wr‘hl‘ius‘z the moral reading for the male young person? aud whq most frequently poses as a victim | or tempLed by the women who havo partiei- | 3 SR PN 0 ey auired and worked the brakes on the loco- | land and his former secretary of tho navy | £Ueat3 showered the happy, pals with rosd Take any community of 10,000 inhabitants, en blinded by her 1ove and led into sin | base enough to attempt to destroy the | ng original weig of the engine was [ beli cord nor gonz on the locomotiva, so all | George Bleinstoin, proprictor of tho Buffala | carciage. | A proity tribute this, iud less look closely into the lives of those people who ars ber sorrow and shame in_silence, and | mi 'l!:«lll \l’“‘»l\l.l':l]l“l:\ll\ “‘"‘-l‘l‘l"‘;[‘w “‘"“‘“‘\““": about ten tons. The boiler was thirteen | COmMUBIcation I‘..Im\_‘-(-u engineorana brake- | ¢ ””:I-y “,’,‘"f'(;' d:-l» wl-l l’l)l u‘ he r“‘»‘ n:l» «;wf:-u\‘u”n.vy'.l\:".{‘.!‘mx'.\u'.‘,‘r“.'f'r?:ful...?:'::': fovm 1. ot soslety and you will fina | never appoals to. :lh_‘l‘"l"_"I"“‘f““‘lfq_":l"y“f"" PY: | DServed him right ' But the cases are in. | feet long and three faet six inches In dian AR MOLyNOraI0L ANk, AL EIoRT 0F) B T tateation. — Asthe | i8 not a'pleasant traveling compaaion, pars women who have erved and lived down thelr | 0 0 o0 O bite. T rapoat. | namerablo where women attempt to lure | ter. ‘The cylinders.were nina by twonty | wine. The body of Lo locomative and the | Ciof nor with his administration, As the [ yjcularly whon it is desired to avold feeling errors, and men who have suffered for their | j'\. ' voatigate the lives of socioty beople | marvied men back to their old follies and | inches. There were four driving wheels, | tender is painted an olive green, the romain. | frors B shehiol (Wiiiaey, Wi rening | irituted. sins, in any city today, we find among its ranks | to destroy the wife's peac Certainly, in | four feet six inches in diameter, made with | der of the iron we the patural color, un- | ¢ R o ‘ Hakyeaatinat Diihis Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Thayer of South While my sincere sympathy miust ever go | womeén who have lived aown serious follics. | this respect, the reformed woman has the | cast iron hubs and whoden apokes and fel- | broken by the brassor nick®l bearings of the | Tilainstein with & reqaest (0 oail on the pres. | Braintree, Mass., cclebrated the seventys with the women in these matters, since by | In a western town,famousionce upon a time | easier time of it. Of course, we must make | locs, The tires were of wrought ivon, three- | present day e John Bull weighs 2 ident. but the ex-secretary replied to the in. | fourth anniversary of their wedding on April nature on he the greater penalties, yot | f0r its beautiful girls, two young women vied | the allowauce for the womuan being wrouged i s of an inch thick, and the depth of | pounds, exclusive of the vitation with & blankoty-blank, doubly em- | % Mr. Thayer is 88 years old and his wife s with each other for the palm of belleship, | in the beginning; yet the girl who falls was ono amd a half inches. The | jncluding the tender. The ¢ hsizad, if ho would, and expliined to the | 92. Both are in good heulth, They have sbservation and a sense of justice hve com- Jik ““V R Tetlitil Mind Cbright; one | through blind love' is nov the ong who re al guage was five fect. Tho interior | ard passenger locomotive in use on the Penn- | Puffaio aditor that when hin. former chief | had seven children pelled me to modify former sweeping asser- | was weak, sweet, and full of affec. | venges herself upon an innocent wife after- | arvangements were primitive in the extrome, | sylyania rajlvoad at the present time wei was running for president last yoar and his | Miss Marian Phelps, the only daughter of tions, which 1, like the world at large, have | tion: ~ the other ambitions, mercen- rds. It is vather the aet of a balked ad- | and the handling of the levers used in start 000 pounds, or more than five times as | prospects were not the brightest, Cleveland | Willism Walter Phelps, American minister made upon thesubject of relative immorality | Ary nd designing. Ihe sweet, | venturess, cheated of her golden prize, ing or rever: involved a considerable | much as its original predecesscr. had authorized him to make & number of p: to Germany, and Dr, Franz von Rothenburg, of the sexes weak girl was led into disgrace, and her | There are scores of men today all about us | amount of hard work on the engincer. When Coaches of Other Days. ositions and promises to men who controlled | under secretary of the interior of Germany, name became & byword in her owh town. | who aro being slowly tortured by the de- | the engine had finallyi been successfully ar ittt K olonti T e [ N anmunced. ore ngeged ta; L' maral No just and thinking person can reside ten | Phe other married a rich man, ran through | mand for hush money to hide some old siu— | ticulated and placed upon the track laid for | Two passen, johoa' ave’ nttachod to [ K8 FRALL, S8 KHELE BCHOm T B e e IR el ks ta'a Rétken BonAY aiels Bhens years p a large clty, or move wbout among | his fortune in twa years, dcseited him and | men who never open the moraing paper with- | tho experiment the bailer was pumped full | tho historic engine and these coaches are | dilihy MU 0 O i iows that | her fathier's beautiful estate. in New Jorsoy peaple, and not acknowledge the fallacy of | e upon & lifé of adveniure, which for | out a chill of apprehension, and who never | of water from & hogshead, a iire of pine | hardly less intercsting than the locomotive [ fleeiet (aad EVery SCHSIDEIBAT Ehans Uit | REE T8 IERS BTl ol L R Tk} oo arror Gebarain waoins s was u record of grilded vice and folly, | hear the door bell ring without 4 quiver of | wood was lighted fn the furnaco end av an | itself. Oue of them was discarded over | wyitnay, and now *uot one single promse | yaken place in this country has been more o e Y LSRR A 5 s % Pinally, tiring i > was received | the nerves. Men who seek volitical laurels tion of thirty pounds steam pressure | twenty-five years ugo and purchased by a | \b f o n o id there is no indication | tulked of and written about in advance of foraver from association with respectable | I b 18 4 fortunes | can Lestily to my words. Yet those who | Engineer Dripps, nervous with excitement, | New Jorsoy farmer, who-converted it into a | {19 een kopt, anf there i no Inficamion | talked of and written about in advance of society. While he who has any faculty for | made a reconciliation seem desirable to her. | know of the stain upon the honor of these ; opened the throttle and the locomotive | chicken coop. It was discovered and boug v A9 € RORY. ¥ y H inspiring confidence or any ability to read | She moves in excellent sociery today, enter. | men say: “Behold the injustice of the | moved over Buman ueture must learn” that men suffer | tains, and is admired by o of pioneer rairoading was greeted by 0 at outs, and tha an interview with e vared and hous| bledges.” Under these circumstances Mr. | York on Tuesday, when Miss Cornelia Mar- v the rails. Between 1831 and [ a few monthsago ina lunt for relics by a | QRGHETEC (00l \lo0 baliave that his own seif | tin. the only danghier of Mr. and Mrs. Brads large cirele of | world, which metes outno puaishment to | 1836 the John Bull urderwent considerable | representativo of the Penasylvania vailvoaa. | GRS S N FNTEE (M0 TH0 R TG | 1y tirtin swis mirried o William George far more for their sins thun the world at | friends. Her early rival, after years of re. | erring man!" modification, as changes suggested them- | It was carefully refitted and appoars now | FRBEL FNAC A HR o0 TR, CRVETHIE | Jey WA WA EE ven, The brids 1 large. imagincs. pentaince and sorrow for , married a here are hundreds of men who suffer | seives to the watchful eves of the American | in ull the pristine glorv of its palmy days. | {0 Y R GOt il B | e O . with willowy form and of A young man of my acquaintance lost the | nobie and wealthy manand removed o a dis- | year after year the torwures of disease, con- | mechanic, and in the latter year the engine |~The other was unearthed from a heap of | TS0 TER N0 G0 SR OR o irotary | vory graceful manners, and only 17 yeurs of #irl he deavly loved by having his uamo as- | tant city, where she 1s beloved and respected | Scious that they are r what they have | was in_uctive service on the Camlen & | lumberrard rubbish and stored away many | pi01'to cull ut the white house when b e ; 4 sociated with an immoral affair, wherein he | at the present time. sown. God is not so i respecier of sex | Amboy roml just as she appears today. Dur- | years ako in the Meadoiws shiops. Now it has | 0L C 1 N0 138 JEIILS iduge wlse ne il ag X Ve e was really guiltless of any sin. It may be urged that the recital of such | a8 the world at large sup| ; and men are | ing the more thun half a century of life the | been restored, its parts coming from the | B0 "5 0 Lamont's frequent visits to The marr w_wl.\h\» Maud w]L l\lltr of Both were intimatefriends of mine; and 1 { cases will Lave a pernicious effect | punished more frequently aud thoroughly | sturdy old machiue suffered many vicissi- | scrap heap and blacksmith shops, und one [ R0 PRECRRS FIRIIEE GRATARE FRIEEAG | Me. and Mrs. | Larlard, ARG, M b witnessed the agony and despair of the man | upon young girls; tha they will | for their sins then is imagined by those who of fortune. After many yearsof ad- | missing truck found in w Jersey marl pit, | (RO P E0F CEAT 10 “Didcating the Lad Suffern Tallo N e Seha ‘I““A Whih during many months. The fact that he [ discourage good women and encourage | see only the surface of life mirable service th machinist suc- | until it'is reproduced as it was in service fn | Jo¥S RN EUECH VAT G B in a position to | Wok place ln New York, Suturduy of ""j had associated with the immoral people | the viciously inclined. 1 do not be There is & spiritual wave sweeping over | ceeded in proaucing »vements which | 1530, Know say that the ex-seeretary is not week : ds | who caused tne scandal served, at lieve there isa girl in the lund who would | the world which will compel men to su sgated the old engine to the side track The old coaches are thirty feet long, elght | [i oy iod) 4ud that us far as e 15 concer af honar, Tho Brico, wha b N AGEIEES fn this ong ¢ to the man | consciously or willingly face the career of | Wore and more for their sius. just as there is | and it was stored away in Bordentown for a | feet wide aud six feet five iuches hiich in- | PIACALed, Wi Lt 4 oaged hesuty of tie brunokia hipe Ay as graly as it huve dam- | either of these women. I beliove any good | ® growing liberalism of thought which com- | number of years. In L it was rescued | side. There is an entire abs e of any at " k. SN unusually lovely in h-‘l u‘h 8l Aress o white aged his fiancee. He has since marvied an- | woman, however louely and unloved, would | pels the puvlic to give woman a chance to | from the oblivion which was enveloping it | tempt at ornamentation of any kind. “The [ . 0 "7 s the snider, | 22U, made smbly 4o 0o RRISAONE-REVIG other womun, and is a prosperous citiz shrink from exchanging lives with them live down her mistakes. Slowly but sugely | in the quiet Jersey town and exhibited at | roof has no ridge for ventilatiug purposes. | ‘The first bridze bullder was the spider | Her veil was of point lace. She wore no It will be urged by sentimentalists that had Out of the palace of love and peace they | the world“is coming to the knowlec ‘fi the lmfmelm.m centennial, where it at- | V is secured by a table slats | and the ropes un L ARYE CF A SRidoRS, W b | jewels. Instead of a boquet she carried & it been a woman whose reputation was thus | must often be led into the inquisition cham- | there 18 1o sex in sin, and that a universal | tracted much attention. Its next pubiic ap e the windows. o twenty double | are always attached with geometrical ac- | prayerbook marred no future marriage and success could | ber of memory, When a woman once loves, | standard of morality must be adopted for | pearance was attheChicago expositionof rail- | seats, which are very narrow, and | Curacy -> have been possible. But this is truo only in . story books or in cases whero the woman is | ever slight, with other the recollection of past familiarities, how- | men and women, and that the muntle of | way appliances in 1803, and since then, being | the four single ones.” are made of - A general wail is heard all over Michigan r‘unnrh sensitive, and whose nature and | source of regret to her; how much keener | to cover the falleu woman as well as the | by the o lovers becomes a | charity must be stretched out wide enough | presented to the Unitéd States government | boards upholstered with & grayish wa A cloth of very fine textuse s made from | about the scarcity of hived girls, due in vironment shut bLer awsy from the dis- | wust this regres be when memory bilogs l fallen man, Euia WassLgs WiLcox, lhnu been a uotable featyrg of the world of ‘here were no brid ids nor mas o bark per tree ulberry gre great pa heir departure for the World's Pennsylvania Rallroad company, it | terial, sunilar to the stuff used in old stage | the bark of the paper tree, & mulberry grow- | great part to t " 0 A i coaches, The backs are devoid of uphol- | ing in the Seuth Sea islauds, ) fair, where big wages aro offered them, ‘i [phuivey i

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