Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Ao A S 3 —— CHRISTNAS GIFTS FOR BOYS | ard to Please the Boy “Too Old for His Past | and Tco Young for His Future,” JIVE CHAMELEONS FASHION'S LATEST FAD | Jlow an Anglo-Indian Bride Defeated the Tron Will of & Father by Giving an Emphatio #Not" Altar, Perhaps the most difficult the holiday list is the boy of the family ~-the cne who is just about quitting knickerb but has not quite reached th o of long trousers. His tastes are as uncertain as his clothes. Ie 18 in the transition state in more than his garments, There is plenty of the boy in him still, but there is as well more than a hint of the coming man which reduces him to a condition that may be summed up as oo old for his past and too young for his futare. And now to make happy his doubtful present is the problem which is distract- ing his elders at the moment, says the New York Times, The boy's mother is kers, the only member of his ecircle of ac- quaintances who understands what to rive him. Depend upon her knowing §18 closost and inost unsuspected amble tion and gratifying it, too; if it bo possible thing. His other parent, however, and his grandparents, with his sisters and his cousins and his aunts, and all tho rest keop a blank against his name on th holiday list, groaning every time they come to it, in an agony of helplessness: “What shall I give Tom?* or Dick, or Harry, us the case may be —*What in the world do boys want?" The mistake lies at the very outset in thinking that he wants something en- tively (ifferent from the rest of the world, They don't want a set of china, certainly, nor a pair of braceiets, but many things that ocenr readily to an in- tonding giver to be bestowed upon their sisters would equally delight them. One boy rejoiced for months over a Christmas gift of flowering bulbs, which ho tended with patient finding am- ple 1 ' in watchin growth rom the moment the tiny shoots ap- 1h-nr(-(|. Another boy was so delighted st autunn with a pair of fresh curtains in his vather shabby room and has shown such interest and admiration for a brass bedstead that has lately been put in his sister’s room that Santa Claus has been instrueted to bring hima duplicate. The sister, too, is making a pair of pil- low shams for it, getting her suggestion from a remark of his, on scemny hers, that those “gimeracks were fine.” Boys like pretty things much ofteucr than they get them. And they try in their blundering, cubbish way to live up to the ear once, you get me onc “On that band?” lau ghed the mother, significantly tapping the one which rested on the arm of her chair, as he Jeaned over her shoulder. Such a grimy hand it was! The boy langhed, too, away a littlo shumefacedly #Oh, 1'd keep ‘em clean, X had o ring.” The next hollday the coveted ring was forthcoming. The boy was delighted, and the leaven of that ring was soon vis ible all over his toilet. and drew it he said, “it *x “What a lovely pin.” ““How well they get up those things now. The little reptile looks so per- feetly natural one would almost swear —ug! ‘A, it's alive. Horrid little beast!” “Oh, don’t come near me. How can | you wear such creepy, erawly things?” The Stanford university girl, to whom these remarks were addressed by a couple of less strongminded companions, smiled calmly and even stroked the soft, sliky skin of the creature fhat was struggling wildly in the folds of her dress. It is the latest fad to wear a live chameleon in lieu of a pin, and she knew it and was happy, says the San Francisco Call. “*Now what is there to be afraid of! sl sked, as the two frightened girls paused in'the doorway and looked with round eyes at the chameleon as though it was a rattlesnake at least. “All the university girls are getting them and they are just as harmless as flics. See here,” and us sho spoke the givl from the classic shad of Stanford loosened gold pin, which was attached to a around the chameleon’s neck, tile bodily onto the chain threw the little re table and pricked the pin in the cloth, “Why, it's green, and it was brown a one of the other two 2 a step nes at a cute little thing, Isn't its bite yenomous’ 1t can't bite,” replied the young from Stanford. **Ther more harmless than chameleons. ust live on flies and soft candy 00, if they can get them. Why, I just keep this chained to my pineushion when I am not wearing it, and the little thing slecps most of the time. It changes color, too,” “Poor ereature,” said one of the other girls pityingly. “How different the pin- cushion must be from its native grass. I am sorry for thoe little beast, particularly 1L it be so gontle, “‘Ab, but it is the fashion to wear them, replied the other. And the little lizard-shaped reptilo said nothing, for the good reason that the powers of spoech are denied it. The probability is, however, that it finds its gold chain just about as pleasant a uble to carry as some kings are said to have found thefr golden crowns. The dignity is great, but the happiness! However, no ono asks the chameleons what they think, It is the latest fad to added the other. Indy is not any thing They flcas, wear them, and consequently they are wo . ' If all young women were like Miss Amy Lambert it would be a training to parents in the way they should go. Mr. Lamboert, the father of Miss Amy, was a signaller in the government telegraph offico at Allahabad, India. Probably he had beea influenced by what he saw of life in India, says the New York Sun, At any rate, ho regarded his daughtar much as he did the t¢'ephone instru- ments in his office. v.'ih those he pressod & button aud it recorded what- ever he wanted it to. He oxpected Miss Amy to do the same. Finaully Mr, Passana, a dusky gentleman in the em- y of a native prince, met the daugh ter of the signaller and she pleased him Bhe was 50 eminently satisfactory to his fancy that he forthwith aonounced to ber fathor that he wished to marry her. The telegraph operator thought it over. Court gentlemen, even if rather swarthy ones, were not to be had every day, aud it behooved the father of family of daughters to allow possible wooers to come carly and ofton, So he sunounced to Miss Awy that her future was arranged for, and to prepare for the wedding va such and such a day. When the astonished young woman rocovered from her surpriseshe assured her father Shat sle liked not the rajab’s brunette | | | | | Then it was that Miss | | | i person on | courtier, and that to the best of her knowledge the wedding wounld not como | oft. Her father pooh-poohed this out told her todraw on him for all she needed for a suitable tronssean, and took himself off to drink with his future son-in-law hur Amy Lam o5 and yokes, sometimes entirely ring the waist down to the belt Some of the new moires have a ribbed surface which does not preclude the in- troduction of satin dots, or the addition of floral or other paterns in chine effects, or stripes and bars of velvet. ; n Many fashionable women continue to e, UMy her mind as tomcourse of | wear the whito and yellow chamois oyl Ll SR b s A . | street gloves, as they are warmer than although she repeatedly and decisi dressed. Kid, o even . ssde gioves, and told her father that she could not and & S - g would not be happy with Mr. Passana, | Spen they fit well are rather dressy in she nevertheloss, finding that no heed was paid to her remonstrances, joined with interest in the preparations for the wedding. At last the day of tho core- | mony arrived. Miss Amy Lambert, [ dressed in a beautiful new gown, and with a pleasant_consciousness that she had w had eve once, r © new clothes at home than she s dreamed of possossing all at le to the church in company with her father, who, beholding he plac W satisfiod face, told himeelf what a wise father he had been “All one needs,” said the telegraph operator to himself, “is a little firmness, Silly girls should never be allowed to have their own way in these matters.” And all the time'the bride-elect smiled softly to herself, as if her thoughts were peculinrly pleasant. The - clergyman, Rev. Brook Deedes, thought he had never seen a happier looking couple, and bogan the ceremony with the warm ex pectation of a goodly fee. -He bowled merrily along until he reached the que tion: “Will you have this man to be d husband?” your wedc He expected a faint 1 will,” but was almost paralyzed Pto receive an emphatic negative from the young woman, who at the same time handed him a document setting forth some of hor objections. Of course, the wedding did not come off. The guests dispersed in various di- rections, some of them going to condole with the determined young woman's father, who was expectéd to be much downeast. Strango to say, however, he was 50 delighted with his daughter's stratogy that he was quitc hilarious over the affair, and did not cven be- grudge her the fine new wardrobo she had ncquired. What became of the bridegroom, history (in the shape of the Allahabad News) does not record, but after this he will probably not attempt to marry an English girl against her will, 'u. Mrs Cleveland has been interviewed by a Boston Globs correspondent as to how girls shoulc ted. If the small Ruth and brought up according to the | opinioni they will be taught, absve all, seything that it is possible to know of > duties. “I do not mean, Cleveland, *“that theyshould n be made to serub {loors or go into the kitchen to scour pots and par T think if o girl enjoys thorough opportunities of ubserving her mothor's methods of managing domestic affairs she will ac- quire ull that is necessary for the mis- tress of a household to know of such matters. Of purely ornamental educa- tion, 1 think a knowledge of the modern languages highly advantagcous, as Iuro- pean travel is now very general and the pleasure of a trip abroad atly heightened if one knows something of anguages of the different countries cssarily ke fun *% Tn spite of the fact that men pok what they call “women’s fixings, know full well that it is these very that make the home so pretty and delightful after the day’s work in store and factory is done. Lamps and cushions, especially, add to the checrful- ness and coziness of the parlor or sitting room, in which a man can read, lounge, and—if his wife isn't too ‘‘fussy” —smoke, while his gentle partner explores the mtents of her dainty work basket. Some of the new lamp shades are made of many ruftles of silk muslin, cach edged with narrow bluck lace. They are laid over a cover of China silk and overlap each other in a sort of billowy fashion. Red, yellow and pink are the prettiest colors for these shades, Ribbon rosettes are the newest decoration for cushions and work baskets. The pillows are made of India silk in pale shades and are cov- witha sheer picce of lawn em- broidered with a border of small flowers, done in wash silks. This cover is tached to the silk cover at each corner by the little rosettes, which can be made to resemble double hollyhocks. at the; s The twelve dresses which the town of Lyons has presented to the empress of Ltussin ave: A dressof palest green vel vet in Henvy IL style, trimmed with black feathers; a dress of pale dead- blue satin embroidered with trails of heliotrope flowers and green leaves dress of heliotrope velvot: another pale blue moire trimmed in such a way S TthIh Al GuilEh e niealiliati they Ioale as if they were lightly strewn over it; a gown of cream-colored cut velvet: another of ivory silk, and a satin dress of “'sunset” shades, that is enough to make any woman who looks at it sick with envy: also one of reddish pink, vel- vety silk stitehed,with golden stars, and, finally, a dress of silk that looks exuctly like silver. a of Fashion Nof Large buttons in horn or nickel are in high favor, Two-toned laces with match arc fashionable. Some newly imported costumes of fine black Inala ¢loth are trimmed gn hulhl and sleeves with ermine fur, Bourdon, Venetian, a fine imitation of thread, Spanish guipure, point de Gene, and real duchess are the laces in great- ost use, Tiny collarettes for the theater, ope and like dressy uses ave made of watered silk, embroidered or braided cloth, fur and lace, and brocade. Small ostrich tips, about a finger long backed by feather aigrettes mounte upon gold bair pins, will be worn this winter with full dress. New opera wraps arcof ermine in loose box shape with very large sleoves of black, green or ruby, with collarctte to mateh, edged with the fur, Hats turned up in front and those with brims cut in the middle and rolled back, 50 48 to give a brimless effect, are popu- coming to some insertings to 1, Wide of velvet drawn through or jet buckles and slightly puffed to give them a broad effcet, trim the fronts of small primrose bonnets and toques. Added basques and panie also panels and apron overskirts, continue to appeal for patronage, but, notwithstand- ing this, a certain reserve is being steadily maintalned, Jet in every form will be more in vogue than ever—crowns, bands, aigrettes, buckles and sprays being cagerly sought for hat and bonnet deco- ration by both young and old. Cream-coloved crepe de Chine com- bined with fuchsia red velvet forms a voery protty theater waist, and another duiul{ creation is pink cropon made up with black velvet and jetted bands. Gloves this winter follow the shades of the toilet or street costume. White, rrim 80, flesh pink und Spanish yellow lor evening, and gray, brown, tan, green and fawn color for the street. Apparently “fashion said, let there be sequins and there were m--lmun," for all of @sudden they have MUashed out ou effect. Berthas, collarettes, lace frills, jabots and fichus are peremptorily demanded by present fashion. The style of arrang- ing the bodice just now greatly favors the elaborate use of these dainty and be- coming accessories. Bonnets this winter are diminutive af- fairs indecd, and elderly women scek in vain for a genuine protection for the head are obliged to take up with the | Empire round hats added to give then Decided contr and have strings bonnet effect st in color and fabricis theorder of the day among fashionable | winter gowns. Light hues are combined with dark shades on out-of-door cos- tumes, and dark dyes in velvet, fur, bro- cade and_moire ‘are introduced into pale-tinted toilets for evening wear. That triumph of thriftiness, the black silk gown, has not in years been so much seen on smart occasions as this winter, where it appears at all sorts of func- tions, from the hystevically ecstatic b o'ciock tea to the gorgeous pageant of the swell weddin, Black la nsertions are in great use this season in inch and two-inch widths laid flatly on the dress fabric and notin- serted as formerly: so that at present they appear with'a tiny purled finish. Lace edgings to matel are sold from three to ten inches in black and like- wise in cream u and milk white. A fabric which has been taken up with much favor is fine Borlin felt,which in eream white, pale yellow and golden olive is made into table covers and sofa pillows, These are bordered with flowers, arabesque designs, and garlands in shaded silks or wools mixed with gold and bronze thread Feminine Notes. Sir Kdwin Arnold says that there are out 30,000 **pootesses” in Great Brit- ain A fever chatelaine nurses, Dental inspection hus been introduced in the public schools of Detroit by Mrs. S. G. Holden. Heidelberg university has formally opened its doors to women. A daughter of the late Prof. Windseneid is the fivst to avail herself of this privilege. Mme. Tolstoi, the wife of the eminent veformer and althor, veceived a diploma from the Moscow university when she was 17 yearsold. A year later she was married, her husband being twenty years her seuior. At last the identi “The Heavenly Twins" has been vealed. Mme. Sarah G her friends us Mrs. Mce seribed as a slender, woman, possibly 30 years old. Mrs. Amelia 13 Barr has taken the place formerly occupied by Mrs. Bur- nett as the best paid female anthor in America. She otten receives $5,000 for the serial rights to a novel and her shorter work is proportionately well paid for, ‘While female suffrage has carried the day in New Zealand it has exporienced defeat in South Australia, where the adult suffrage bill, which embodied the principle, was rejected in the popular house on the third reading, but oniy by a narrow majority A young woman named Greely Per is the editor and pro- etor of the St. Petor, Minn., Journal. [or a long time she and her sister did all the work of the paper, and did it so successfully that they finally received the contract for the county printing. Mrs. Maddern, an English write been making fun of Chinese for wea pigtaiis, She, no doubt, is ignorant of the fact that it is not so long ago sine Englishmen sported pigtails and English thermometer is now made in form for the use of trained of the author of re- rand s known to all. She is “de- graceful young Horace women wore hair cushions on their heads. A peculiar advertisement recently appeared in an knglish paper. A woman vibing herself as *“a lady with spare time daily” offers to play bezique with invalids or other persons desiring a partner in the game. She wanted re- muneration, and concludes by asking “‘what offers? an queens of Franee only teen have died without leaving thei stories a record of misery. Lleve were divorced, two exceuted, nine d yotng, seven woere soon widowed, three cruelly treated, three exiled: the poi- soned and broken hearted make up the vest. The wife of W. D. Howells has always been a true helpmate to her husband in his literary labors, in which she naturally interest, Ho in the babit of consulting her about his plots, and ho submits to hor everything he writes, before it is permitted to veach the printer. Miss Jessie Ackermann, president of the Australian Woman’s Christian Tem- perance union, has, during the last five ars, traveled over 100,000 miles, and converted 9,000 women and 8,000 men, besides writing about 700 newspaper ar- s and raising $9,000 for the cause, Miss Ackermann is now lecturing in London, At Nagoya, in China, a merchant,who is in his G5h year, has just divorced his wty-sixth wife and 1 about to marry twenty-soventh. He had resolved when he ‘was young to marry thirty wives, and is delighted that he has now only thres more to marvy to keep his VOW. Now it is the overworked barmaid who is enlisting the sympathios of English agitators of the woman question. 1t is r \Imm-.l that there arve 120,000 young women in licensed houses who work from fifteen to over cighteen hours on week days, and from seven to nine on Sunday. with cne Sunday off in each month, Louise Michel is expected in New York very soon, the Kuropean papers say. This famous woman is very dis- tingus Mme. Seiue of Paris says of ber that she has a countenance like a daylight dream, her figure being molded to realizo the' soft dignity of her de- meanor, Her head is clussical in shape and her eyes mild, fearless and full of exprossion, Little Minnie Terry, aged 5, was once taken to see her Aunt Ellen as Juliet In the scene where Juliet drinks he potion, Miss Terry was clud in whi robes of a dressing gown or robe de nuit order. At this point little Minnie, who had & decided idea of the propricties, turned to Mr, Gilbert, who chanced to be in the box. *'No, no!" she exclaimed, putting h mail fingers over his eyes. *You mustn't look!" In the tailors’ workshop of the ¢ operative Sceiety of Glasgow the women were lately taking work at lower wa, than were generally paid to men. fnn wen accordingly demanded that women should be dismissed, and struck when their demand was refused. The tailors’ union made peace by arranging that the women should be paid the same wagos as the men, a rather novel but who | the | “TWENTY P\nY OUR EFFORTS-- . To make this the greatest rug week, are worthy your attention, Fur Rugs. Mounted animals, Red Fox wolf, wild cat, etc., $8, $10, 12¢ Real Angora skins, in all shades, $¢ White, black and gray China goat 28 Smyrna rugs, 30x60 inches, $2.2 Oriental Rugs; Rare pieces in small sizes, both antique and modern at very reasona- ble prices, and the assortment is unusually large for Christmas sales. Chenille Curtains. 100 styles: oo 3 $2.50 64 inches, 25 per cent off our entire line: Out of town orders will be sent on approval: Orchard & Wilhelm Carpet Co,, 1414-16-18 Douglas St. through the sympathy of our common nature and not of our expericnce. centially just v tion. A medical journal declares that no woman doctor ovor earned a living be- y Of settling the ques- iciles 8o overcrowded that on their doorways S < might be tacked this varaphrase: “All yo | by Fourteenth street who enter here leave decency behind’ [ by the where only the rent and the death rate aro | Bowery and Fourth high, and the standards of virtue, cleanli- | dition of a an Irregular square, A Mexioan Frontier Dall. One night the patron gave o baile, writes girl, and the way they dug up the dust out of the dirt floor soon put me to coughing. | ‘Candles shed their soft luster—and tallow | down the backs of our necks, and the band scraped and thrummed away in a most s the Board of Health at 2 posed of 1235411 ind population of the city is 1,5 down town wards muy An ofic! raw material for 80 crimiuals. families, com- s. ‘T'he total 601, Six small with confldencs be spolen of as forming the most crowded spot training was really the stumbling bloc and the causeof all this prejudice. Verily, times have charged. A writerin tho Pall Mall Gazette 5 Aoy ous manner, One man had a harp, two had | on No obtainuble statistics of t{l""kfllnu}.tudl“”h?’s'“ )“"“‘lm'l'I“l""""'.h‘j idales unldu Iy flnll' ;v[u Engtish or continental cities show a popula- NOVAI00N 2 TL 0RO R0 L : o ie bowed his ing that of this district of greater the swell, tlm WOrse will | head on his instrument I could not keep my | Naw Yorl where else on the fuce of the 8 L v York. Nowh spell,” @eclares he. A large ©oro- off him. He had come from Sonora, and | globe human bewngs packed together in net on a letter has sheltered tho most N l‘“'l: hr" looked as ‘lh“i'l‘h he had § suci com 's; nowhere are thery St AT 5 3 & most | had hissharcof a very rough life; he was weather and starvation” and time had blown o mits literary solecisms that would | yjiy ana crumbled him into a ruin which re- and harmle wreck a train. 'Tis only pretty Fanny's | sembled the pre-existing ape from which recognized way! and if Fanny happens to be & [ the races sprung. If he had never com- by the med Guchess her errors will not in the least | mitted murder it was for lack of oppor- tunity, and Plymouth Rock. Tom Bailey, the foreman, came round to me, kis eyves dancing, and his shock of hair affect her position. onora is & long travel from The_reminiscent woman is_now fad. You will hardly believe the it but it is taining valnable true, that the fashion is to talk of great | standing up like a an beauty’s, and voluntary tostimon things you have done or wonderful | pointing, he said, *Thar's a woman who's ofonL VY Exprons, ol people you have mot. Jeiety women | prettier than aspeckled pup; put your twine price, $1.50 per botti on her.” Then, s master of cerémonics, he strajghitened up and sangout over the fiddles and_noise: “Dance, thar, expand upon their trips abroad. ness women chat of the monoy they hav Busi fore 1860. It says: ‘‘No respectable | Frederick Romungton in Harper's. The | ness'and comfort arcso low as to scarcely | thence between Houston family in any commonly respectable | vadieros came with their girls, and a string | merit consideration; where self-respect —the | to Broadway. It neighborhood” would let” rooms to n | band rondered musie with o vory duney | salvation of the human croatur tenty Rt oLl swing. satin a corner d observed aid to reach the vanishing point. urnishes “homes’ woman physiciun. Hien whon friends | pun’ho wours tho big hat and who throws | i New York i4,007 frout tonement the ci gave her shelter a bfisiness card or $1£1 | the rawhide as he cavorted about with his | rear tenements. with a population given by | vides I was not allowed. The lack of prac.ical bounded on the . on the east and south st river and on the west by the avenue, W v swarming north ith an ad- acres oxtending wnd Canal streets, embraces scare ly one- ifth of the whole city's area, but it for nearly one-quarter ot s population, and_incidentally 000 yearly of the eity’s 40,000 deaths, also eredits it with supplying the pro- per cent of Gotham's ials. o “TTIOTHER’S :| . FRIEND” . n Aclflnhflcnlly prepared Liniment ; every ingredient is of uo and in constant use al profession. :ns Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to lifo of Mother and Child. Book “To Mothers” mailed free, con- information It short- and s prepaid, on receipt BRADFIELD REGULATOR C0., Atlanta, Ga. Bold Ly all druggists. sepa Lot etrong do ulso the various aivisions of Christidus, should ther nough fore leave for aggression, and 10 its Siam fate, | wo appreciate Lheir suyings ang deeds poten- Mme. M. Yale's i 25 as the Armeniaus, the Greeks and the A B which Siam had formerly done to China. | Protestants. Al these quarters are donsely i e S tiolars il with 1o s e built, with narrow and irregular lanes for X 5 THE MNAG NES, streets, but the prevailing prosperity does Excelslor Complexion Remedies not seem to reach the abodes of the Hobrews, The indications are all of extrome poverty. A synagogue was pointed out bearing an in- seription showing that {v was the gift of a Paris Rothschild; but its mean appearance AWARDRED TH HIGHEST MEDALS & DIPOMAS A Fow of the win December Century prints a hitherto un- published essay by James Russell Lowell on “The Fiy ot LN o8 | and unattractive surroundings bore no sug- 5 Vorld's {aniRynnctit The Fivo Indispensable Authors,” There | 20, unativactive surfoundings boto no sug- By the World's Columbian Exposition. are certain books, he says, which it is | gution. The articles of food set out for sale | Beanty ('n\n\- R uth ](r-v-lun d, Wrinkles Re- necessary to read, but they are very few, Looking at the matter from an wsthetic point of view merely 1 should say that thus far oniy one man had been able to use types 50 universal, and to draw figures so cosmo- moved, Skin Dis- in the petty littl shops were often squalid Al and repulsive, We camo 8o often upon spoiled salt fish among the stores exposed by the venders, that we concluded it must form a regular element of diet in the quarter, There was no visible sign of indusiry by EXCELSIORATR TONIC politan that they are equally true in all | which the people might earn their living; languages and equally. acceptablo to the | B N0 ono need be surprisea to learn that in themlstrys Greatest Discovery. whole Indo-European . branch, at least, of | YAvious parts of the world well-to-do and 3 time in the history of the tho buman family. That minis Homer, | Charitablo Jews are regularly calied upon to AT 10 \ RN ‘ ' 1 o bute to the support of their pauper without dyo. M and theco needs, it seems 1o me, no further | SOMH W cirenlition 1o tho coloring brethren in Jerusal: proof of his individual existence than this nently 1t 10 Its R . el pgrrraiivedte] As we leavo his ill-famed r \'[n( and then | own nutural state. Mdecd o most remarks | —— —— ne Gt WRL A TR ey [ toward uie east whe lotty wallof” Jorusalom ‘ni"v‘u,3.”“1}‘;:,:‘:’! uonet, fiihe o s |~ awives, 1 The moro wonderful they aro tho more | 40d he massive towersof tho citadelare | " o™y ; 0 whose hatriins likely to be tho work of ono person. No. | inmediatoly beforo us.. Wo are on the outor | poen rentored OmahaTent-Awning | where 15 the purely natural man presento 51&!:‘\’UI“.f’ln)‘\J)n‘l(‘l{i.:ux‘ %o “‘:'fi‘..fi?“‘.’.fu;“’nfl the | Price, $1 per Bottie; 6 for $5. N ‘ [l;l)w:x‘:i %0 -novly apd sincore wi ;'hllurm‘ the llmn-;- strata of the wall FRECKLES REMOVID WITH Yiage, baiomovks oll ; I e might have been shaped aud put 1 place by Yoila tor oneatogas. 11k | Nak {25 below. {heaadd- Auould ol some prehistoric race of gianis. More than Farnum ot LA FRECKLA. Yalo Kig, the almost anything el Jerus: 10 be found around sm, or within, this wall bears an e of history of the spiritual man is sketched with cqual command of material and grand er gift could M 1 her famous La ¥ It mattors not |f ¥y an HOME INDUSTRIES x 3 Y you fellers, or carned, Literary women indulge in | {65t the gout. e harangues about geniuses they have | “In an adjoining room there was a very met. Tide and time seem to wait for | heavy jug of strong water, and thither tho woman while she punctuates her conver- | men repaired to pick up, so that as the sation with “what I did some years | night wore ou their brains begin to whirl DR, WILLLAMSON s after their legs, and they whooped at times “The ompress dowager of China is said | 3 W3Y 10 DUt onc's nerves ou edge. | The res @ € pand scraped the ha and the dance to have great influence with her | waxed fast, the spurs clinked, and bang, sPEclnLl sT nephey, the present emperor of China, | bang, bang went the f i the | G e sopiein =UIAL To her advice it is believed the neutral- | patio, while the choru el patron” | ® rosiden ity of China io the Franco-Siamese dis- | rang around ihe room—the Old Guard was | EXGE slo i NEW ERA " pute is due She is reported to. have | inaction. L SURGICAL DISPENSARY. told the emperor when he sought her o Jerusalem of Tod b e S Og advico that his first duty was o look | Tho present population o Jo } AMERICA'S MOTTO. LS o (restmons after the security, wealth and happiness | far from 40,000, and more than 1 =0 . A R r A AT R CERH T (TR prites Charles A Dana in ')’f‘"l‘,l”.. ey | F e i e hzonte pRaivate e 0 or consiilt PATHONE rof | 9% B Tt BREWERS, outhne. Dou Quixote stands upon the same | bearance of - ereat aubduits. Wo s \ prella u‘m oy level, and receives tho: saume universal ap. | €481l i utions were la ) iy xlutence and 1citve tho skin clear, &mooth e TP T preciation, . Here we haye it st | i the tn oo David, dhough it uprer por: | 4150 fred Krug Browing l()mllmg,“m“,-” tho natural mun sev. bafore us n humor ious are uaquestionably modern, Lo books Price, $1 per Bottl>, o contrast, 1n the knight and his squire Cor. | YOrY: Oue says it was tho work of Sultau - Our “DouLiod Cabinot | Guarantosd to equst Stloiman in the sixieonth century anothor, beer dollvered tof tho olty, ks 0n Kb vantes has typified Lhe two opposing poles 7 of our dual nature—the jmagination and the understanding as they appear in coutradic- von. This is the only compreliensive satiro ever written, for it is utterly independent of time, place and manners. Faust gives us the natursl historyof the tuman lutelicct, Mephistoheles being merely the projected iwpersonation of that skeptleism whichds the invariable result of a purely intetlectual culture, These four books are the ouly ones 1 which universal facts of humuan nature and experience are ideally that it was erected much earlic and my guide, a most intelligent and weli-informed Jew of Hungarian origin, told me it was built by the Crusaders after thoy had gov possession, for the purpose of protecting the inbabitants agaiust the rascally Avabs, who would ride up in small parties, rob some vich fawily, sud be off with their plunder before anythiug could be done to stop theu But, however this may be, the wall, from sixteen to twenty feet in height, fully in- closes the town ; and, although it could soon be knocked to pieces by a 10-pounder cannon, EXCELSIOR SKIN FOOD it EEFORDIEWE 2 AR FRLL FUR COUPON. COUPON. lady purchasivg any Paxton & Vierlinj | J WHON WORKS. | wullding work, englue To every reprosented. " Thoy can therefore vover bo | i°{unasfu good order, soild enough for ail remedy of Mme Yale this week o splaced, * ¢ % — S P actIIas S 3 A - - 1 have not mentloned Shakespeare, beca peaceful purposes, and porfectly separatos kin Food will be gives away iy iR oY aRIRGG the eity frow the country about it. loneh they u \uman genius, th a different cate k the very highest level of yet represent no special N | epoch i the history of the inaividual mind. | yant “T'he man of Shakespeare isalways theman of | Yime i tual life as bo is yoted upon by the worlds | yight ticin for 1taclt. “Tnreo-l of sense and of spirit und ain defivite | York's population, says & writer in g CoatRAn e ReP i Shasotle e | Yorkes bopuniios, sae u writer b tle | MYy M, WA LR tion of Macbeth or Othello or Haumiet, and | ynd one-balf in tenements of such tnhapny Chiaracter Lbat their baleful tnfuence catnot BEAUTY AND COMPLEXION §PECIALIST. elp but be warked upou thelr crgwds; dow. | 601 Marbneh Block, + Quuhn, Neb & test for removisg Wrinkles trace of age | New York's Death Traps. w York is breeding a wob in o mob that, so far docile, unless its wrongs are ri and ev her tene- will some hted, and Lhs of New Present (his ©dupon, week on) PRINTING. ! Reed Job Prmtlng COMPANY. Eeo Bulldiag “Good for oune ‘ nents, Ually, 50 o speak, rather than actually, Hiiverad Lildg oF i3 Vienas 1ad baur dae s, Lo IRON WORKS. adustea [0 Worts Manafa arlng 01 r3 ( all kiads of 704 8. lhea Telophono 1442, omm ilin} C) Omco hna My 1815 N, it Page Soap Co. Manufaoturers of Uniog soup. 115 Mickory sk v 1 b of