Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 22, 1893, Page 16

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1893-SIXTEEN PAGES & ea - § Stoves Carpets Silverware Silver Plated Butter Dishes worth Furniture Furniture Crockery & China $3, now $1.45. —— SN CONSIGNMENT QHEONTIGNNMENT, ON CONSIONMENT. Silver Plated Wator Pitohers worth Sikikd Hots WOFLlr 080, niow 850, ON.CONSIGNMENT, ON_CONSIGNMENT, Wood Stovos worth 89, now 84,50, Body Brusseis worth 81.50¢, now f4c Silver Plated Castors worth 10, 15, now 7. 50 Wine Glass worth 10¢, now 3o, Biass Beds worth $65, now $52 Box L 818 \ < 4-hole Runges worth $16.50, now Yelvet Brussels worth 81,76, now 0do now 4.7 Silver Plated Cups worth $1.50, Woven Wire Springs worth $2, Mgl ] 1d Dinner Sots worth G L e Tapestry Brussels Carpots Silver Plated t'ickles worth $4.50 . How 750, now 85a Canvas cots worth $1 A 7 . DOwW 7.50, © Combination Chiffonier Wardrobe ney Cups and Saucers worth 81, worth 75¢, now 48¢ ¢ $2.45 A Bhead g L1 a1 A ps ¢ a orth 81, §-holo Ranges worth $24 50, now Tapestry Brasels Oarpe ; . A Onyx Clocks worth 82, now 81,50, Wiroe Cots worth $2.50, now $1.25. Lt GOW SO0, ikt $11.75, AR LAl silver Plated Napkin Rings worth el % MAVLFSHSBE WOreh 86,80, o b1, Fire screens worth $1,50, now Lemonado Sets worth $5, now 81,90, Heating Stoves worth 6,50, now Tngiain carpets worth 750, how Japaneso Tin Trays worth $2.50, o Albums worth $7.50, now $3.50. Rockers worth $3.50, now $1.40. Bl ng Comodes worth $2.4 Wine sots worth $5, now 5 Tograin carpets worth 50¢, now now 90¢. 5 13, 5 Bookenses worth $15, now $7. now &1 Pudding Sets worth $4.50, now $1,74 Mattings worth 8¢, now 14c. Bread Knives worth 50¢, now 18¢. Oil Heaters worth $12.70.now %676 Buase Burners worth 830, now $17.50. Onk Stoves worth $12.50, now Parlor Cooks worth 8$18.50, now Bookenses worth $10, now $4. l-lu‘-hml-n.w Rests worth $7.50, Water Sets worth $3, now o0, r v 1o 5 ARSI : izl now #3.50, Umbrella Stands worth $4, now $1.83 Linoleum _worth $1, now.dsc. Butter Knives worth 756, now 26 Combination Bookcases worth §15, Padestals worth $12.80, now § Cuapidors, worth 80s, N6 S8 All wool ingrain remnants, 4l T now $5. 50, PRI, C v , now e, worth 75, now 25¢ el Qnyx Tablos worth 815, now IFumblors worth e, now 2. Cotton i in ren ts, g Folding Beds worth £15, now $8 Siver Card Stands wotth § Jird Cages worth $2.60, now 81,25, Vi ety S Worth! ;Lm, now 100 Scissors worth 81, T hivas. Wam Pictures Folding Beds worth $25 now $15 now %6 Hall Lamp worth 85, now 2,40, Matting remnants, Siiver Plated Butter Knives worth Folding Beds worth $85 now $ i Toilet Kitehe u_lmnn \\mlh' 75¢, now 400, worth 85¢, now ¢ A " AR ke Bedsteads worth $6, now 8 «"l,)‘_“ b Dinner Sets worth $15 now $7.40. Art equares, worth $12.50, now $5.75 Silver Plated Nut ( r*f lr(‘y l-:“:; S Chefloniers worth $15, now 3 . xrn“hu Cabinets, worth $25, now Carlsbad Dinner Sets worth $40, carpe! th 50¢, w 200 v o ; Etehings 3 Chelloniers woi th $20, now $10, " _ 7 Y now $19.75, b iii’,fili,"p‘,!lff“iq “J?,Tl'.‘, 400, now 14 Siive llnlmlUr""u"sm::":VIQ'“"‘ Etchings, worth $1.00, now ChefToniers worth $25 818,50, “II umboo Stands worth $1.25, now Haviland Dinner Sets worth %um_fl Heating Stoves wort Stair ¢ ' worth 40c, now 1o i N Ltchings, worth $10.00, now Center tables worth $1, now $1. 90, P & now $52.50, $14.50. Bixto-in rugs worth 88,0, sow 81. 50’clock Coftee Spoons worth 7 Water colors, worth $4.00, now $1.75 i Brass Tables worth $7.50,now Toilet Sets worth 86.(0, now $2.9¢ AN Misfit curpet, worth $10.00, now $1 Artograms, ' worth £8.00, now 31,50 Mirrors worth $2 81, Dictionary Holders worih 87 Toilet Sets worth #3.00, now $1.04 Base Burncrs 845, now $20.50. Skin rugs, worth $500. now $1. Oil paintings, worth £10.00, now Mirrors worth $1 3 now #8860 £ Slop Jars ~ worth $3.50, now $1.4( Coal Hods worth 50c, now 15c. Wilton rugs, worth £5.00. now $2 50 Game pictures, worth $, Iron Beds worth ¢ $0.95, .‘\h‘m« Stands worth $7.50, now Hanging Lamps worth $5 now $2.6¢0 Dampers worth 25¢, now ¢ Ingrain rugs, worth $2.50, now 90c Fruit pictures, worth $3, now $1.25 Kitchen Chairs worth s0c, now 150 ey Hanging Lamps worth 4 now $1.6 Stove Pipe worth 20e, now 10c. Hosools worth 81,00, now 406 Steel engravings, Antique Chairs worth 81, now 480 Hall Chairs, worth $10, now $4.50. Piano Lamps ~ worth $15 now 6.5 Zine Boards worth 8150, now 75c. Dios Mty WOBLL 75, HoW 268 worth 815,00, now $6,50 Fine ‘Diniog Chuirs woith 81,60, Children’s Rockers worth $1 Decorated lamnps worth $2 50 now ¢ Pipe Collars worth 10¢, now e. & 5 ass lamps worth 50c now 180 Stoves worth $10.50, now $4.90. Cottage Stoves worth $20, now £9.50. Steel Ranges worth 65, now #88.60 French Plate Mirrors worth § now 75¢ Silver Plated Cake Stands wort $4.50, now $2.25 Silver Plated Baskets worth now $1, — Extension Tables, worth $12.5 BRARE R KL ON CONSIGNMENT, ON CONSIGNMENT. e AL WOUN 8250, HOW : % i . o A now §7.50 S DA A (l?hm(lmts “.m.‘\h 85, " now 81. };;:‘l::: Suits, :‘\ ”. ‘}: 360, now $29.75, L’r;(\il q[' Desks, worth $15, now xtension Tables, worth $15, E L A by L v ilert Vo omforts worth $2.50, now rh vor 0.25, Oftice Deslkes,worth & ), now $: now $8.60 ::::l“;li‘i‘llll;\l:‘]:i :-0.'-"1:{,.-'“, 'i;‘(;’w $1.45 BreaatPEns WORLH 150 How 160 Pillow slips worth 85¢, now {:\r!urfi.um. worth $100, now rdrobes worth $20.00 now %0 now $11. Chenille portieres ey sipindlas WoTth S06 ow Edl :'luvr\*ljsli \\'()I-Llh e, Tow e w_m-_u]x‘ 0. now $5.6 rdrobas, worth 25, now 81 Dining worth $4.50,now $ 810.00 worth of goods, Olioniils bortlores worth . HRVCOIPARE OTLHIS08 oW Bod Sprends worth 82.60, now. 9 R oS S Te e Sideboards' worth $25, now 1 Kitchen Tables,worth 81,00 & Wesl or'$4:00 & HORLN oW 8008 Nirs, Potts’ Irons woith $2 now 83c 8 :.:m)\ [olders wor ‘d‘ isc, {m_v:" chos, worth §22.5), Sideboards, worth $30, now $1 High Chairs worth $1 th ot goods, Silk curtains worth $12.50. Pio Tins worth 5¢ now e DE IR OUNE O Lo Plush Chairs, worth 85, now 810y Sideboards, worth $10, now $23 Scrocns worth | $1.50 0 woek or #6.00 a month \iow 85,75 Tea Kettles worth 750 now 866 : L llSestworinte) fu\;w 450 Gilt Chinten -‘,v\\.\:l' .1]“ % now $1.90 Buffets, ~ worth 815, now $6.90 50, now 65e 850.00 worth of goods, Vindow ahadss worthiel Coffee Mills worth $1 now 45¢ el 0“.51 w olr!': | NOw Oc. Solid \mhokuu{ I: # ‘.l:\\f 34.50. Chamber Suits worth $20, now §0.40 Cradles worth $2.50, now $1.25. $2.00 0 week o $8.00 a month Y oW 24b Steamers worth 40¢ now ERLELOS LRSI SR ST Chamber Suits, worth $ Infants’ Crits worth $7.50, now 75,00 worth of goods, Curtain poles, worth 30c, now 5¢ Presorving Kettles, worth 50c, e S StIRLAre X LF sy Plush Dusy OhHitEN FoChIe10 6] 3 i o0V 813.50 : $2.50 a week or $10.00 a month 6-4 tapostry covers, now 2 Pl ST oty 5 MRk Chamber Suits, worth 35, i worth 25c, now 8e. $100.00 wor th of goods, worth $2.50, now 90c Coftee Pots, worth 40¢, now 15 Fl‘ E\)S{ mlt) it e“fn\‘w}\;vnu.k 5 Tulted Couches, wortk s‘.,,“““ 8 5 £ _now $19.50+ Wall Pockets worth $1, now 40c. 00 a week or 812.60a month Verona plush, worth 75c, now 24c Ten Pots, worth 40¢, now e Nobie Blaketaihat b Chamber Suits, worth $30, Medicine Cabinets worth $4.50, $200.00 worth of goods, o : A ; now $27.50 now $2.25. $5.00 o week or$20.00 a month AN e RS N pin in the center, and “hang it all,” a de | devotces in Scotland. goff) is of doubtful | cade have the students ‘s c vented i > MDS TO FUN AND SPORT | hen 't hang fourhooks on four litile pe; antiquity s but throughou its whola carcer, | cussed Just when. amd ohors oy D RO GRS B | SON Rl Do The licutenant THE ANTIQUE CRAZE, all show by their name where their concep- | and it is certainly several centuries old, it | but the. st when and yhero it orizin maintained that from the dotted ' tablt tho | was shipped off toa distant garrison, aud ’ : A < o R 2 B 2 4 45 )y 0 V2 nol ecided yet. The ¥ ransition to the playing card merely | the princess w forbidden to think of him, se Furnishi pierw, s ro s ug special at- | national home. in the last e i whoso history the game can_be | tion of the evolution of vthe playiug c i i oll iil, and pined away : e DIprSi G Pl by they wero looked on as showing the | lnd whore it hus. beou trequently accy whendata is available on which to base any | tainly descrves more than passing mention. | He consulted the court physician, who could tauo ¢ ( b of threatening to oust lawn tennis, This, | kiud of a theory it is so unreliable that the | But it is diflicult to’ convey in words what is | not minister toa mind diseased. and the up- i i for grace, Necessary to Boyhood. S Lo P evar be ‘\ull':vrl,'-ll;‘s <'nmml.lnpmc among themselves | shown, in some mensure at least, by the | shot is that there is to be a wedaing at Mu- Ao noiefmyaworhip sy iy : s 3 uct, h ven within an odd 5,000 yearsorso of its | exhibit, the successive stages through which | nich with the young lieute the love- Q1o Wi nsoN IR L OSION BAMES AS VIEWED BY THE ETHNOLOGIST | Erom » fllf:,'\'.'m,‘:l(lfl-cxgule:h:.‘uolr‘l:f\?su‘: reason, that ennis owes its popalurity to its | real anuaun 0 P iB T AT B achil Sl el ahaben S artho! | Rro A Adask e ot s s RasReloTe On unzes loud stono; 0 plac adaptability to crowded districts where For e e, chatur: an | cour: i : o 3 ¢ might be though thero was no placo on | adaptsbiity to crowded ¢ -~ where or example, chaturanga, the Indian | course of its long and vavied life, It is sup- ? No social event of the scason excited so Sho has no time for words of love, T e L e e e I asteiory aegoiirants oL IanilaroHat] hess, from which our own game is der posed to have come into England from | much general intorest as. the internationa Besuuse she has a eracklod Jar, unlike the ordinary peg top of today but | open common or heathland, tho larger tho ny chunge, is by so Iranve, probably not unuil after Henry IVs | wedding of Miss Flora Davis of New York ARl vonhorlisariviliony £lo) tor In Dotermining tho Hablts of a without the steel point, discovered at | botter. Its rules are not very exact and, | bir ) The e ‘ I proy ons . | ¢ty and Lord Terrence John Temple Black- A tattered ring or broken bowl Jrithouritha taieel point,dscoversd Uat iy s « st. The 'story that is suid to | From then until now tho changes have been | \ood. socond sou of the ourl of ulerin i ’ g ; Dead Nutlon—Concerning Other Cahun, in the Fayum, Egypt, by Mr. | indced, have to be suited to the ground. To | have come down with it thi s || untinportant and'the honorcards and . nums ARS00NAR0! 0/CAELOSIMTOTIN BN Vil bri re coior to her cheel People's Pastimes, Flindets Potvio and supyosed to' bo 4,700 | form golf Minks” ouv'of the wildest” and | that it was inventod by the v anin, | oricallcards in hearte; lbe; spadesand dins | tor e BHtis nmbassador o Parls, 1t ) T S A L i nes, vears old, roughest land, all that is required is to level & o e LA A PREDD, ol o hearis;iolubs,ispd 1 dia- | took place at the American Episcopal church hat L could utter in u wee S Tops of the Sioux Indians, ancient ones of | ning (or eighteen if there bs room enoush {‘..‘:T.-,Ef-.}’fiv'fi"‘.'n‘.\.hL"L','.'f,‘f,t“"‘ I Lanka was | mouds us known to 'evory """?,"’d“‘ ure | in Paris last Thursday. Miss Davis is a E stono or bricic and o modern ono of wood | “teciug” grounds which must be about fif- | equally good position to give nn onmion de | 1 OUY aoubt many centuries old, daughter of Mr. Johin H. Davis, who has had Among the multitudo of other material to | with brass peg; tops used by the Omahas, | teen or twenty feet in diameter and must | cling to concedo. that clntimman o os: Miscellaneous Card Gamey a residence fora number of years on Wash- Uniless 1 0180 bring to her attract attention from all visitors to tho | by whom they ‘wero known as moo de do | ench havo i its center 4 small hole measur: | than 1,00 or 1200 yoars old. Singulaely | T classes of games remain to b men | ivgton square, - New Vork = city. = Mr. 50, hOUED L 10v6 hOP muth. T Tog oo R IR a1 A Alons Sbuay 6 5 ska; prehistoric tops from Ancon, Peru, | ing four inches across. These holes should s Jears old, Singulacly | 4000, hoth of which cover a large flela and | Dovis 8~ plain an, and though Llove hor, much 1 iear World’s fair and close study from those who which are identical in design with that | be from 100 to 600 yards apart according euough, W lu.n.\ T and whe nover the game | ooy ahc'even fill large gaps. The prejudice | has not been in society for a long time, Lord She must give o'er her erazo for delf, had the time at thelr disposal was one ex- : y part a ing 10 | may have originated, this same story of its | Y Aeanl prel! 1 it Or like ho 1l By ovime at thelr disposal wis one ex- | from the Yahum, and another Peruvian top | the nature of the ground. Tho ball is driven | fnvention by & King's wife during u sicse ot | BRBINSY playing cards has given riso to the [ Terence Bluckiwood is the sccond son of the | g O ik lioe hitgs biid Lustorus t, vory carefully arranged and fully eat- | taken from a-grave at Arica and similar to | from one to another of these holes with | told with aimost tnvarying detoil in oery | Wvention of a large assortment of other | marquis of Dufferin and Ava, and is one of 4 —_— slogued, which seemed to havo been rela- | & pres Y Jupancse top, show how ex- | clubs, of which each player has from three | country where it has boen found, > | Games of cards, mostly intended for chil- | tho secrctaries of tho Dritish embassy in LAPLETLE, uvely somowhat ovorlookod. Away down [ tensive was their use amoug to natives of | to adozen varictics, und‘an expert wll mako | *“fho choss oxhibit at tho fair includes o | o0 “Dr: Busby,? the first of theso, camo | Larls undor his father, e will be i § 5 ity his continent, the round of eighteen holes in seventy or " el o carved ivort on from | ©ut abouu fifty years ago, and its su ors " ). Q1p] - . 4 1 . by :.Itl: Lh;, I‘LiV\IthWl‘SZ (TR 01'}\\:3' grounds, in Next to the tops aro a_fow examples of | eighty strokes. g y nl Ll.‘l:’lllllu(mi’::.“l ox’m“in (Qfl ‘:.\,ullv men from | §,1udo s number of spelling games like | before long, and may at a date not v 4 mlnu ?n‘n.m town EHIIUI‘L Midlands, .,_r;\nlua © building known, genorically, as the An- | popguns—I’eruvian and Omaha Indiun, the | ‘There may be high walls or deep ravines | port: a board Of olahiy-chh oo vt S%° | word making and word ag, anagrams, | distant be ‘sent to ihe emvassy at W fg) thers I8 A Fioh confroguiianrhiol ta thropological building, Mr. Stewart Caln | squirtgun as known to the American boy of | or streams of running water between the | bet of flas ieces it Aemmcs Loiies 4048 | Jogomachy, words & tences, spelling | ton. Miss Davis' woedding dress was o | Dot charactorized by lavish librality, ' Time had arrangod, with much pains and fore- | fodav, and. ono in the main similarused | holes, and links aro fur from desirable thav | surface, for the Japaucss gamo of shogi; u | PUZes, and no fower than soventy-cieht | heavy ivory-white satin, with a train which | SIRELENC f6 MUREG UG V0 DRRCLS thought, an excellent collection of games | inthe Hindoo Diwali festival have not plonty of “hazards,” but the “tec- | bourd, divided inio sactions, but in principle | E1mes, each of which has its own peculiar | hung from the waist in box pleats, over o | 4 W& PEUGE 16 (RTINS MO FGICTNOR and puzzlos of all kinds,of all ages, and | ohinicns 18 the Engllsh namo and les | ing) grounds around the holes musv bo cov- | much llike our own, and picces for tho Cin, | degk of cards yord long, on the fioor; the front of.the sklrt | 05k1d, Indood,. give somouliing, bub, it was g ). 0%A jouchets the French name for the game we | ered with the finest of turf and kept as se il M, 3 The other is a class of board games, | Was combosed of one straight piece of white L 9 1Y0 801 & gathored from all nations. The oxhibitis | know in this country as jackstraws. 1t is | smooth as a billiard tablo, Tho skill Of tho | Tk, the. Liimtso wae oo bieccs for mah | 1 og1ly adaptations of horso ov yacht races | satin until just below the knees, whero it | nearly always thoe smallest silver coin of the latd out in o, series of twelve glusa cases | played with an assortment of ivory or | game lics in getting out of difficult positions | turés of tho Inaian chataranga, the Bay. | L0 the tuble and depending on tho uso of | was looped onboth sides, over superb old | Feptit BItEWAE AUEE B TG o oony running across the building from the wost | Wooden sticl.s, ench about four inches long, | with tow strokes, and this, of course, de- | mese and the Malay games: aod. foalisy | dice. Of such games the nane is legion. Inco flounces, | At onosldo the draped satin | 5% tho piaco and Joiued tho church, was A TP about an elghth of an inch wide and taper: s much upon a judicious use of the dif- | Moorish board and an ariay of Hoalse | It should be mentioned that the museum | \Was fastened bya Louis XVI satin bow. [ coimnRo the BACE WA IS BIE CLTRCE WIS Every gamo may be looked upon as indica- | 12€,10,8 Poiat, and with a “lieud _shaped in | forent kinds of club. Tt fault is in tho | chessmen aud boseds 2y OF EnRlsh | of the University of Ponnsylvania provided | Kuotandon thoother held by a bunch of | Aok 1008 TR ORGS0, #1000 s brage ¢ % Narions such —as a sword | poor opportunity 1t affords for competition | ~Draug| 88 i the backbonb of the collection, that the bulk | fauge blessoms, Lhc high-necked bodice of n ' U i, tive of the habits and nature of the psople | haudle ¢ @ spade handle, or | or rivalr; i raughts or, as it is more commonly o A WLy white satin was finighe walist by i nd. “I'll tell you what,” he said to i ) valry, although its followers fin checkers tak i ern American games 3 86, ALY ) X% this better than a comparison of the national | f o wards of the lcoy. “Thess jackstraws | shuw, who s considered the father of lawn | German draughtsmen of the oighteanth con. | Whom Messrs. McLaughlin & Co. were con- | 414 shoulders, fiulling over lrge, fultsavin | FETSEIO, o FOTRTS : outdoor pustines, respectively, of Scotland, | A1 A0S I an fndiscriminato heap on tho | tenni in 1ugiand and has of Inte years boen ol 1o “Prof T ettt Yol | Shiouous, and thik Mr. Culin ' rocoived | sleeves was a doublo bortha of vich antinue | Uqus Whiree MEREMG) w0 0g 1nd ure Englnd and o United " Statos—golt, | St the game is to remove them one by | giving much of bis timo to golt, his found | gpoicon of, this game s a modorn simplifca. | 1uF aluable assistance from owners of ) a ¥ ol ), I« reve 0 much as new virtue in the game, e say: he can v I o, th rthor assistar owners of i Uige blossoms. A lony | cuough the collections begun to incrense, oricket and base balll And in the arrange: | shaling any ono of tho others. There is a | kaop at it tho whojo day long, which s cer: | 1O% OF chess. apmcimensctonsions o anderis woURes | eoile el tastano spray.of oringe Do || WnUNbY the timo ‘ielliag sKatodtheyNEre nent, o T pa ) CO 08 ch g lormerl ment und labeling of the many different ar | fiue set of ivory jackstraws from China, and | talnly not true of tonnis. Alds %0 Lasinosy, SETIRSOIANT TR soms covered tie entivo costume. whivh was | nearly tvloo as much as forngrly, oo ticles in the exbibit there {s an ovident de- | it 18 Suggested that it was in that country | ~ Battledore and shuttlecock, quoits and a | , Halma Is perhaps the best known of the CONNUBIALLTIDS, Anomnal DY PLINR oM IR OL G WY by 1" said th tor to bim one duy. 8181 to emphasize the importance of games | W° B4TO 1ol birth, few other forns of ring games, are examples | lester bourd gumes. But thore is an almost g Jalatiug, reviosenting oas of iie oldens fame | MU0 S e s X ha 4 4 f gar of outdoor sports not played with a Al | endless va y of these, of which the large n 2 . s | ilies in 'rance, ERAY. ROOERL: FRSRER ity ‘E‘I“fll}l‘l"\"’:'h].:-l}:l]fl" Tossnr vah"\‘h 1“‘1‘\ gives Of Which the Ball is the Mainstay, of{9utdoor #poris no L'I Yol v lem‘fl -kl{ml \ill number shown in this collection 18 only & }1 gland s sald to have over 1,000,000 he TR R e or ?“«‘v‘\'l but I'l ‘lln{l youin con ‘\;’:.”.. \\'l l\‘l. Soint out their valte in ihis® reenaee ang | Following tho cases eastward the next | curling, very common in Scouland when ice | Small part. —Fckha 18 merely a variation of | WhaoWs : PRATTLE OF TIE YOUNGSTERS. 0145 TR ALK V- RIVOUDORIY L Ll G [} thoir valie In this respect and | o)/ de s Humber of outd | aan be foundito nlat it on' 8 he Chic halma, and there are also in the exhibit: Itis always safe to tell a girl that she (o hadd when [ got the money every Sabbath even shows how the gnwes of primitiye eopl a number of outdoor pastimes, play it on, and the Chicago 3 Tt by - 0 ¢ 1 refully picked oot the swa' coins and By o (ovided 1605, (1) Blas wames iy ag | aud consists almost exciusively of jgames of | Curling club displays threo sets of curling | SUateay, u military game; politicn, or ins | looks s protty as a ploture. Nou need's |y o fathor is a physician, and one | 1t Liase b Ron as thors's only limited Shaldren's tos, tops. Huteias i ha fortp, | ball “There is,in fact, hurdly anoutdoor | stouca. and ouia, auppossd to'le an oxact ooatar. | comuly. yourselt ab quality duy Whon tho doctor was ot 1Toward and & | bunber of S-pensy piecos i i [ttla place tnd (2) sorious games, which usually had | A of tio prosent duy, and the remark ind congressimen ave elocted; suscoptibios, | | 1 have gob s fuss on hand with George," | Lo pluymate were wplaviag doctor!in tho | like this, and as Ihave muistof them peacred or velleous significance. | eico to the jeumes Of the ancients, ui which | . In the same caso with tho curling exhibit, | kerion, ‘brax, mind reading, MoAllister, vo' | The'son of Mimster. Egan doesu's soom o [ hel GOCioLs offiot:, TReseitly Howard tirow | presens under lock and oy, tho follc mauy It aey rootion 1s 8o varled and g0 complete | Rl Pthough It may be of aimost. any b is a display of miniature billiard tables and | versi (a game thati appears to be unique in | huve been persona non grata to the Chilisn | F5od Sioleton to the torrifiod gazo of nhis | b aas hiis colloctions ars doublod b ST i ; it that way might | woioh'e'or matarial, is not the principal part | other articles used in that and kindred | muny of its important feuturcs), migration, | ladies. He has just married a duughter of & mate, but Howard himself was perfect! tho way the collectious are doubled, :f:““y“m{k;{;’l'o\vl“mt‘;‘yn:,‘l'm;:“"'y‘;“:!‘fl ‘:;a of tho equipment, ' ames, aud we are back at once to parlor | seega and kohls or World s fair halma, These | senator of that country. B AT i i e Eas J o Xt struments used by people { ever .’f Bat trap, or trap ball, is probably little musements, Chess and checkers are pre- | games may generally be ssed as instruc- | gaid a recently married New York lady to | mate, **What you 'fraid of? 1v's nothing but Indiunapolis Journal: “I'ierc may he some M nations long apo desd and of th madaey | known 1o the younger generation of Ameri- y A large assortment of simpler | tive amusements aid some of them might be | her mother. **What's it all about?’ ™He | un old skellington!" *Wh-wh-where aid jv [ 8004 In your religh ta_iho”abidicus Aenations lone wgo dead and of tho modern | g0 iy gl comparativoly com | board games, many of them variations of tne | wweluded among what some one once cailed | inaists that 1 shall do the cooking.” “Ho | bemo et ssied Waltor, with chattering,| Young wounin, ) Hover mBke s, merican, uropean, - Astuic, or African, | g Sore parts of Bogland. the game | familiar fox and geese. Among tho countrics | means to muko the lazy lears, Sbon ont ‘nen doib. 1 wouldn'e have any | omim. oron. 1 dante kanars With Shatterina) seo any renson for your horrid practice of ge. has beon traced back to the fourteenth: cen. | Fepresonted in this class are quitea number | There is & class of barlor games that are | sympathy with him Wwhatever.” WM time." 1 guess 1kely it was his first | baving more thn one wite.” onted to Rack the Brain. tury and an illustration copied from u manu- | ©f the castern Asiatic nations, and it 15 a | not played on a bosed. ‘liddiedy-winks was Designing Mamma-—As to that young' Mr. | patient.” +Allow me to explan,” said the Mohame Otia fonb 4 he ik a1k B ian. Ona matiin ¥ipt of that peviod (s on exhibition, 1t fs | SIEnificant fact that a board from Japan and | their father, and the birth of tiddledy-winks | yorsunio VARES TR ) bank Youhg, Mb. | ¥ 1, modan migsionary. ‘In o fsh pluce, "'ng: Ally thinks of Chioa as the birthblace of puz- | 1ot unreasonablo to suppose.tht i grew out | fuother frow Peru, used in what appear to | 18 of very recent date, Others of the class in | excellont shape, Obdurate Daughtor—I | Tommy—Are you“going to whip me, | 1L consiqered Koot fomm b Eet it Te the tles, but puzzles from the Celostial kingdom | of the still moro ancieut game known to the | hive been almost identical forms of tho | the exhibiv are parlor quoits, magic hoops, | 450y care auything about his affairs. It's | mammat A Womai 080 KUdding==] D OVR AL AR L are far from plentiful. The catalogue ex- | youngster of toduy as tij . Tn tho same | EAme are also almost identical in- appear- | snap dragon, ring & peg, bean bag game, and | 490 Wallo MY SHaFa'thar 1'ni objecting to, | | Mamia—Yes, T am, Tommy. word-— e 110 AL00e: e 8 ANHH alains that those which ure made for export | Case a8 the bats aud traps for trap ball are | 38¢e: 5 o sovies of aduptatans of outdoor aports for | mamma, Tommy—You said tho other day thay | '0SaY b home ire favariable in form and consist. of the | Shown au extousive Assortment of Lcate | Jupan and Chinacontribute a game which, | the parlor table, such 4s tidaledy-wink ton. | "¢ MERE S whipping never did me any good, dida't you? Weli : y he' " shreo well known samples, the ring puwle, | One from the Kahura, pt, of the same g hi variations, seems to be peculiar Eu, lolo or table eroquet, and parlor base l”hu “"‘"f’.“fi L':‘K;‘ men‘ T{n’ ;li‘lllt:fllhnlnx Mamma-1 velieve 1 did } 4 “Well u.h she lvrs u‘» u.n‘ ’m l‘u r,;‘;:e.:" oy A e B8 | Gate as the fop round 1ot i 1o those two countries. In Japan it is known | ball. vellum, with the text as richly illuminate: ] v Detiave 8 il <5 | the time, her husband would uever se A Do ARy oihers that L et | o ANt batod Specimen framo piace: 414 | a5 go, and the bourd on which 1t is played is To Sult Al Tastes. s werd tho old isaala: o beautitul is tio o TOmmYEuEH WAV Ve a0 of whipping | jo oking other than what you call 4 perfeok anve dovised they keep, like their best tea, | Japan, India, Ceylon and Burmah, Russia | 60 ban. Our gawme of go bung, sa Domnoes is & game that every child | ba atvauge. if thero weroa roturn to the o fright I shore waro 1ok 0ie trictly for h and Persia. "Urap ball - label attached to this exhibit, comes sfrom f ¥ e strange vhere Lo outshine,’ strictly for home consumption, id Persia, “Urap ball is played with a short | 1abel attache i 2 to have bean | should learn. [n its simplest form itis ex- | much derided old fashion of framing them | Auntie—Do you tind Your lessons hardt P o Lho basis of the collection {s a series of | bat (notmore than two fuet long and in | yAbA Sl it nawmols supposed Lo havoe been | 4yomely simple, but :novertheless it has its | and hanging them on Lhe wall Littlo Nephew—Some of them 18; buv [ 5y 100n press? “'m going to turs Sast Indian puceios whioso authorship s at- m:)pa mueh vory similar 1o 3 swall oricket l:;;";!;;gnggu ;;‘,‘.’le'g‘[";‘, for the bourdin | f,50ination, and i the figuring that it in- | - Baron B f Grunobaum has captured an lin' and pronunciation is easy o eialiiies Prosss B8, gelof do- R I ziz Hussan of Salaranpore. ) solid' rubber ball about an | UHis Ja - 2 volves hasalso valuable educational features. | American heiress. Heis to wed Miss Lily | ““They arel” nan ¢ cuuuintance. But the lavge bulk of the 100 and more spect: | bk and &' half in dismeter, and | AhoZunl Indiausof New Mexico baves | Ay the same time it way be played us & | Sheran of Gallatin, Tenn.; the daughter of m. Al you has (o do is to pronaunce [ MR 10 &4 Bcuuaintane 'A‘,;’,"I'flf,‘:.'t'l',‘\"‘l'[’: “fi"tl‘lvxt':wnllugr\hu famous :‘:e"tar”.hmumh«r-p is au}x;-u-lumukm s d.f' TN It 18 Dlayed ona. board of 14k squsves, | Bame that philosophers may find perplexing | the famous horse bréader of Lexington, Ky. | wor ¢ Way isn'v spelled, and spe “l've joinod the church and I'm going ta uzzle which, though two centuries when one end is struck with the | /5 Y - | and sufiiciently complicated to sutisfy the’| She is about 19 years old, very handsowe, | ' u they isu't pronounce @ my ghib myself, is the good book ad, was resurrected within the memory of | bab the ball, which has previousiy been | The moves are made diagonally as in check- |y, Sty “UCPGREC ) [ SATRN LEG | She Is ahout 1Y ¥ : ) Y % Love my nelghbor as mysel, o K00 v 4 P 3 4 o C f A y ere s s sald to have an 1ncome, in her own 3 * commands 0 do." many young mien of today, and quickly’ at | placed ‘on the other end, is projected into | £F8 but tho men arc placed at the corners of | ol dispute as to its origin. 1t has been e of $25000 s year. Tho baron mey her | _Teachor--Towmy Mgy, you may give a | SORUANTE WSAOERT g o bis Jalned s marveious popularity. Soveral pug- | the air. As the bail descends it may be nbjn‘llolll.h.u; BN o et ncross the bonrd | 8scribed to the Arabs, the ancient Hebrows, | at Hot Springs, Ark. definition of a gentleman as the word is un- |, He tles aro shown which are avowedly varia- | driven with the bat and the score 1s counted 06 0 gamels to got across the board | o, 1o the Chinese. In any case it was J ? derstood nowadays. e e By R sions of this famnous one, such &s the by the runs that are obtaived before the | 814 0ccupy tho placesof the opponout forces, | §youghy to England by French prisoners at | . A 184y wio was about to bo married en Tommy—A gentioman is a feller that ts | Wil K At i SEaduitil OO RAG, AR Bfteen or th “jumper,” the presiaential puz. | ball is brought -ack by the fielders. ' The | CADIUEIng as mauy stray men by the way as | (1 cloge of the last century. Itis believed | Lered o printing office just outside of Boston | 4o dead sure that ho is better thau ull tho | £605 L MEOVENS, SO0 RERRCEED tle in which tho blocks bear the loiters of | batsmau, &s &) cricket, way be ‘run' out or | Possible. Who mothod of capture is prob- | g havecome to France from Italy some | 80d ordered a number of invitations to b | oiner felicrs that b doos mot ever bave o | ¥ n ik Y the president's name in lieu of numbers, and | caught out. 0 ly unique. Instead of Jumpi Ing Oover | yine previously. printed. ‘The proprietor, a jovial sort of say 80 Why 15 it that the fréckled-faced boy bwo others, kuown as “Columbus discover- | 1018, of course, only & primitive game; but | Lhe man to be hraken®, us i checkers, or | "Nyith'aominoes arve shown a large assort. | Mab, thinkiug Be ought to say something, o 1ol e B v e 7 e Awerica" sud *Blsmarck,” very similar | it 18 clsimed it Las nad lnuences on wmany | Femoving “‘"; from the board and occupying | yeng of Chinese dice games, of great inter. | Femarked: ‘It seems to me that avy one | yisitor--So your brother is taking lessons | PN DVRL PR B BN, JRECAC, CMG _}h:”prg::u.}&uz{h ! : f Lh :r::l::lly“l;hnueo Same: ?(;n‘. cng 8 ISR &% J.CHAN S 5 BAORMAEY ‘:"B::‘y‘ @8t no doubt to the ethnologist but of littie | WhO marries in these hurd times has consil- | o the violin. ~Is he making progress? Lit 4 n clover, clever ntury. Crickel an X J “Twant to be | - B erable courage.” “Well,” replied the lady, ho violn. 1 he making proguesst Lat | away from bhim always vings T wi Awerican invention, whioh auickly attaines | base ball have foatures which may sestauly | 10860 that well-nigh unfathomable problems | iuterestto tho verage reader. They are | 81050 SONSR o work, hud we've got to do | 9 Girl-Nesihi ho's 600 b0 fuar W can an Angel” louder thun anybody clse in the ; hibited, however, as casti Bethor he is tuning or plaging A favor In this country and in England snd roadily raceable o the far older trap | JEhidevelop whon the Zuni masters wet A i NS m:{:tfl:e::"mgpfe‘“flf somethiug, you know.” el o ¥ Sunday schooit p soon produced an exceedingly large litter of | balL ' togeiber . not much to their credit eithor, be it said, | _ “‘True hearts are more than coronets,” ete. | Lattie Boy—The préacher sald there 16 80 | wppae new ehoir It filling the chureh alwilar brain vackers. ('ows in the cora, ative of the Seoteh Heaths. Methuselah Among Gawme There are also East Indian, Syrian, Roman, | Princess Augusta Marie Louise 18 the | warryin' in heaven. Little Girl-—Of courso |\ "0 ' ougny 1t would.” Well, what .tunlu in Wall street,” ‘“spider auu fly,' These two games sre well represented In Chess, despite the fact that it is cousid- | Babylonian and Egyptian dice, some of them | daughter of Prince Leopold of Bavai hero wouldu't be enough men there | GV expect! You've gobin howmely tency bree routes to the World's fair, “lambs | Mr. Stewart Culin's collection, aod with | ered by so many as beyond their powers or | curious looking objects indeed. She has attained the impressionable age o H They Are Shown to Be an Important Fac- Though I may bring a lover's k Sho lins more service for my rooin Board Games of the Anclents. ‘ dn the piL.” Siho fllv in the ailey," “puss in | thew are Lo be seen the articlos used in golf, | as too deep and engrossing for recreation, is | From dice to knucklebones and from | 1V, aud somo timg ago her roving faucy fell ; e aud & married soprano. coraer,” in which the alm is to get four | la crosse, rackets, lawa tennis, polo, f knucklebones to backgammon and its breth- | upon a handsome young lieutenant of cav A pure article of chawpagne is a healthy | 1 . blea lito the respeotive corners of & | ball and’ croguot. Goif (on an 1t s moss | b 1ty st eooriing to common b | Ten re easy trausitions. The Chiasse | Mlry. 4he warrlor revurned Ler love, bat beverago. Gt Cook's Iiatre Dry lmperial, When palu aad e T o Bud ™ box whick kay an agkravaliog brase: | commonly prosounced im Seouasd” by 1 | Hel, ths oldess of them wll® For iy s de- | Fecords, it 1s sad, show hat douiiaes wape | Whea Leopold discovered tho state of ifairs | {5y eerd’ recard, |t L

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