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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • 13

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE- DAILY AIEBICAy KASITVTLLiE SUNDAY MORKIG 3IAHCH 16 1890 la very top of bet crownr She THE ROSE AXD THE RING 18 A Quarter of a nonnrl nf hot Trip Totnine eyes AN AGED IMPOSTOR brushes it back looaolv nd ping butter it in a soft-twisted BY WILLIAM THACKERAY irom the crown of the head to the it A brown loaf And if hfi llftn' tl rrVi rinTO necx and which is especially pretty TVmifr Now Doing good breakfast I should'like to know CONTINUED FROM LAST SUNDAY XIL The Strange Career of Thomas when the hair has a slight natural wuo ever naa one! wave bometitnes she makes it into a Uiglio having had his breakfast BE- HOW BETSIKDA FLEP AHD WHAT Witn ner wins Lake Harris rench twiBt which instead of coll-in? nnngrH eVi 1 A -A opped all the things back into the and went not InAMnn i CAME OF HER Botsinda wandered on and on till curling the piece left at the nape of "1 A- 1UUIUK lOrSOt tO RUT thla nilakt4 the neck or tucking it under a putr The low Grecian coil on the naDe of rpius and Hair Ornaments as The Patientlj Awaiting In California the llai Are uoru tne neck is aDt to win her fAvnr or if Summons of Death sity town was called Bosforo took a modest lodging opposite the soaools paid bis bill at the inn and went to als apartments with hia trunk carpet bag and not forgetting she passed through the town gates and so on the great Crim Tartary road the very way on whioh Gigiio too was going "Ah" thought she as the diligence passed her or which the conductor was blowing a delight she is young enough she gathers the hair just below the crown braids it in one loose plait brines it down to the Chains of Woveu The mjr auu nig oiuer bag When he opened his tnmir wh-Ah nape of the neck and back again pin- "Brotherhood ot th New Life" anil Remarkable Story of Its Founder ful tune on hia horn "how I should uiag is witn slender gold or silver wire tlfe Ideal the day before he had filled with his like to be on that coach!" But the nairpins Thw makes the catogan braid A loose knot of hair is the uos oioires ae louna it contained Onlv books And in tho flmt popular ideal At a full-dress con- which ho opened there was written coach and the jinfling horses wero very soon gone She little knew who was in it though very liksly she was cere one nierht recently there Bat t-iotnes lor Uie bacic books lor the head Santa Rosa Gal March in front of me a young woman rujtiu aim rumemoer mem wuen tuey are rad Though dead to the With hair of the real Titian thinking of him all the time Ana in his bag when Gigiio looked it A fmind a tmlant' i brown that noets and nainters have Then came an empty eart returning immoriaiizea ana that loollsh crea world the so-called "Brotherhood of the New Life" still lives in this remote corner of the globe The famous religious sect founded at Brocton tures who have followed the exatnole from market and the driver being a kind man and seeing such a very pretty girl trudging along the road with bare feet most good naturedly or Fatti are beginning to despair of reproducing by dyeing This brown Harris Full of the mysticism so attractive to many and aided in their deliverance by the attractive presence and beautiful language of him from whom they came perhaps it is not an occasion for wonder that Harris found It easy work to win disciples In 1869 be persuaded a score or more of his followers to throw their individual wealth into a common fund and to found a community in Brocton on the co-operative plan Three thousand and six hundred acres of land were purchased at the outset and when Oliphant joined the community a little later contributing to the treasury his entire fortune of 125000 six large farms were purchased near by and leased to tenants For a time the community was very prosperous A large part of its land was given up to grape culture and the wine cellars of the brotherhood became more than locally famous but some years ago the manufacture of wine was discontinued Harris was the absolute head of the brotherhood and used the funds as he saw fit Hard manual labor he taught was a stern religious duty from which none could escape and the members of the society impelled by the faith that was in them no matter how pleasant the waters in which their lines had been cast in the past went willingly to the most sordid labor To minister In such measure as they could to the wants and necessities of man wa9 art of their creed and in so doing hey were content Oliphant the diplomat author and traveler joined in the mowing and reaping or the brotherhood's crops and assisted in the care of the brotherhood's cattle doing all that was set lor him to do with a cheerfulness and a buoyant good nature which won the all'ectionate regard of all with whom he came in contact Soon after the foundation of the Brocton community Harris followed by a large portion of the brotherhood came to California It was then that Oliphant and his wife became firmly convinced that Harris was an impostor and after some weeks spent in Carpentering? No Music? No Farming? No But metaphysics and the incomprehensible Yes" Another whose lot Harris had made exceptionally hard wrote: "Whatever he wrote even if prompted by God himself took on the proclivities of Harris Even whe in hia deepest rage at something fie would suddenly return in the sweetest manner to announce another revelation from above touching upon the matter in hand and couched with the most devilish ingenuity to wound our inmost souls" A third says: "We found ourselves in a paradise made by God but turned into a hell by Thomas Lake Harris" Strange to say the greater part of the scattered membership ot the Brotherhood of the New Life as well as a few at Santa Rosa still accept Harris as their spiritual leader giving to him generously of their money and labor Those at Santa Rosa Btill lead laborious lives and practice the most pinching economy that he may enjoy a life of ease and the wealth for which he has never labored Their eyes have not been opened and they will probably cling to him until death When I found Thomas Lake narris on his farm near Santa Rosa some days ago I was not surprised in seeing a gray haired man aged and infirm awaiting apparently the final summons He has his followers here many of them are old and infirm like himself but trusting believing in the great impostor and willing to believe in him until death It was with difficulty that I drew Harris in conversation He has apparently no love for the world outside of his community His talk seems strange his voice wierd and they tell me his mind has long since lost its healthy condition "1 am living in a heaven here as compared with the world outside I ask no alma and desire only to be forgotten by those who are not believers in my faith" The old servants the- farm hands and even the followers regard the old man with the utmost reverence They look after his physi gown a writing book of paper an inkstand pens and a Johnson's dictionary which was very useful to him as bis spelling had been sadly neglected So he sat down and worked away very very hard for a whole year dur-in? which Mr Gilps" was nnitn a air- ii uos rea tnougn mere is a good deal of red in went with choc gave her a seat He said he lived on by Thomas Lake Harris assisted by the late Lawrence Oliphant still exists near this place where the commu VEw York March 13-Copyright off sirl wbose cneeka are Peachy 1 I whose eyes re yellow-brown hair is yellow brown with a Blow rpple in it and makes a "shining and When she is going Sjinghe -winds this mass of half-v tresses into a loose round in the nape of the neck where it rs a dozen fawn and tawny colors seems to get as much support JL the collar of her dress as from eutique sold hairpin with which i trusts it through When people are coming in of an eoingshe takes a narrow gold-col-ribbon and bands it two or three the confines of the forest where his olate brown eyes and a pretty re oia iamer was a wooaman iuu ii iue trousse face The front locks formed a light wavy pointed Iringe over the liked he would take her so far on her nity owns aid maintains a handsome property of several thousand acres ample to all the students iu the Uni- mui ir loreneaa wnile the rest of the front road All roads were the same little Betsinda so she very thankfully iciDibji ui uutiurv ixv uevcr you 1UIO inv riots or disturbances TLi Pro nair was curled and massed back to Thomas Lake Harris with whom meet the back hair which had curl took this one And the carter put a oloth round her fessors all spoke well of him and the the talented Lawrence Oliphant joined enough in it to be strinev and was siuuenis iuea nim too so that at examination he took all the prizes viz: combed up in a loose pufly French bare leet and gave her some bread and cold bacon and was very kind to her roll A band of narrow vellow rihbon hands was born in England and passed his youth In the vioinity of Utica The discovery of the i or all that she was very cold and mel was passed throuq-h the hair at the 1 top tying in a bow and over the bow Book of Mormon by Joseph Smith times aoout her head binding the fluff The Spelling Prize The Writing Prize The History Prize The Catechism Prize The French Prize The Arithmetic Prize The Latin Prize fluttered a gauzy dragon fly with gold lace wings brilliantly jeweled body near Palmyra and the alleged spirit curls above ner loreneau auu lying nnvo hphind thn lpft par ualistic manifestations ot the Fox sis anu sparkling eyes ters made a deep impression upon ancholy When after traveling on and on evening came and all the black pines were bending with snow and there at last was the comfortable light beaming in the 'woodman's windows and so they arrived and went into his cottage He was an old man and had a number of children who were just at supper with nice hot one does not eo to drawing-room lioie classes to see hair dressing but The Good Conduct Prize All hl3 fellow-studonti mid "Hur it was impossible not to notice a New him and induced him to also set to work in the field in which their labors had borne such rich rewards Passing through various phases of religious When she is asked to-a dinner or a formal reception she looks in her jewel boifor three gold wires not much taicker than bangle bracelets each with a row of half a dozen tour-leafed Aivers in enamel on top the bands xorkish and theatrical examnle at one ray Hurray for Giles! Giles is the of those Lenten "functions" a few days bread and milk when their elder belief he finally became a follower of the students' joy I Hurray for Giles!" And hf hrnncrht miit-e nnon- ago ob young girl whose tresses Bwedeuborg and then boldly an were put on exhibition had a fair tity of medals crowns books and to- i-laine-like face and wore an aesthetic gray gown In color her hair was "ash Kens oi uisunction home to his 1 nounced that he bad held communion with God who had elected to make him the chosen instrument by which he held oommunication with his children Nature generously assisted brother arrived with the eart And they jumped and clapped their hands for they were good children and he had brought them toys from the town And when they saw the pretty stranger they ran to her and brought her to the fire and rubbed her poor little feet ana brought her bread and milk blonde" a peculiar shade of yellow with the sheen of silver on it and it let fashion and fastening under the teithery curls escaping from the soft taot oo the neck behind When Sidney Rosenield invited the Woman's Press Club to see "The Stepping Stone" there was a woman in the audience who was a pure nmish beauty Her hair was straight CONTINUED NEXT SUNDAY ATCHISON ADAGES had been a part of her afternoon prep Harris in his role of religious pre California the Oliphants left the Pa aration to bind a wide flat chain of tender: he was handsome magnetic "Look lather!" they said to the old and a splendid conversationalist and woven gold about it which nestled as daintily and lovingly as ribbon and woodman "look at this poor girl and without dilliculty he soon drew from beneath which fillet the long saoothand black like polished onyx about him a little banU of fol loose ringlets fell over her shoulders I its so mure ugnts ana snauows lowers who unquestionably re cal wants as they would care tor a helpless child With him they seem to be awaiting the end that will soon come When Harris dies the "Brotherhood of the New Life" will doubtless die with him What will become of the valuable community property is another question In all probability it will eventually pass into the hands of the State of California Paul B- Moore and down her back giving the young garded him as the source of truth penitent an aspect truly picturesque and willingly obeyed him as their fHerhead was well shaped the features epical No fiuUs or dishevelment usrred the exquisite grooming of her fosses They were smooth as silk i kl 1- i i ana aevotional teacher in spiritual and ruler in tem A young writer who has hair of that poral things The spell which he threw about them seems all the more re UtCU KUlUt UUOy VllOp1! tii8 Clear nuc ui uiuuiL (Jiuuuciug strikinir eilect against the skin and waving texture and low growth on the shame the picturesque ef- markable when it is known that while Harris himself was an ignorant man many of those who became his dis STAGE STRIDES brow 14 associated commonly with the poetic and artistic temperament ar lighter hair seems to find see what pretty cold leet she has They are as white as our milk I And look and see what and odd eloak she has just like the bit of velvet that hangs up in our cupboard and which you found that day the little cubs were killed by King Padella in the forest! And look why bless us all she has got round her neck just such another little shoe as that you brought home and have shown us so often a little blue velvet shec!" "What" said the old woodman "what is all this about a shoe and a cloak?" And Betsinda explained that she had been left when quite a little child at the town with this cloak and this shoe And the persons who had taken care of her had bad been angry ranges it in front in short curls At necessary lier coiaure was sim- piicity itself The hair was parted in ciples were men and women of superior mind and culture Journeying to England in search of converts he made the back she dresses it in large fluMy finger puds with little curls at the nape of the neck On unceremonious taeiiiiddle of the lorehead and sloped smoothly back in a broad wave oil' the the acquaintance of Oliphant who as and every-day occasions two or three lace its sheen and gloss throwing out others bad before him proved an easy conquest for the unlettered pretender tDctiat ot tne olive complexion as Danas 01 biacK velvet ribbon are passed about her head to hold the jht be doue by garnets and rubies and strings of amber On the back it was twisted into a coil not unlike the tront curls in place For evening wear she replaces these with silver fillet One of the most amnslpg things about a minstrel show is to see the seats all in Burlington Free Press Somebody should Introduce a shoemaker's chorus into an opera then they could Bing awl Merchant Traveller Maybe some of the numerous "coming actors" so frequently mentioned would arrive sooner if railroad travel were not such an expensive Washington Post Sidnev Rosenfeld is writing for Helen cific coast and their direct association with the sleek insinuating founder of the Brocton community was at an end Harris according to Oliphant's discoveries extracted from his followers the larger part of their earnings that he might live in luxury and idleness For years he played his role with remarkable success As at Brocton so at Santa Rosa a handsome property of many thousand acres was purchased by the brotherhood the title to which was vested in Harris From all parts of the world his disciples regularly sent him tribute His flowery deliverances regarding the new life were sure to return to him sooner or later transformed into golden eagles But the cloven foot showed itself at last The departure of the Oliphants gave an insight into the real character of the prophet Angered by the desertion of his wealthiest followers he wrote and published a book "The Deliverance" in which the members of the society were sternly commanded never to hold communication with Oliphant upon pain of excommunication Upon second thought Harris recalled it from circulation and destroyed all the copies of which he could obtain possession However it had already done its work for its singular contents had opened the eyes of many of those who still remained faithful to him His views upon marriage published a little later and which if put into practice would have produced a condition of affairs more disgraceful and unnatural than that advocated by Joseph Smith also helped to shatter their delusion His wife was in an bands with Creek fret patterns t'ysche knot of a season or two ago ana gladly became a member ot he Brotherhood of the New Lile" which Harris had formed "in order to develop the higher powers of the nature and to enable those to whom it had been granted to know the truth to be sequestered in a divine fold away from with her for no fault she hoped of her own And they had sent her away with her old clothes and here in fact she was She remembered having been in a forest and perhaps it was a dream it was so very odd the world of materialism outside" For many years the nature of Harris' Dauvrav a new tlay to be called "The Whirlwind" With such a play she religious teachings was known only to those about him but in 1875 while apparently in a trance state he dictated ana having lived in a cave with lions there and before that having lived in a very very fine house as ought to create storms of Norristown Herald to stenographers an exposition of his fine as a king's in a town When the woodman heard this he doctrines which later took form in a There has been a strike of chorus irirls in Knoxville We do not know was so astonished it was quite curious to see how astonished he was He what for but here they generally book entitled "The Two-in-One" Among other things this book sets forth the belief that the spiritual in man divides into two parts each distinct and independent of the other went to his cupboard and took out of strike the boys for a champagne sup per Boston Bulletin a stocking a five shilling piece of King Cavolliore and vowed it was exactly like the young woman And then he A fashion paper says that the best the one the geist the other the im dressing for the hair is an egg If un produced the shoe and piece of velvet mortal soul "The geist" writes a former disciple of Harris "corre Every woman that paints is not an artist If you will only keep quiet you can think anything you please Wheh a man cannot do anything else foolish he lets his finger nails grow long i A man takes more pleasure in saying that he heard Patti than ho took in hearing her Better to be so foolish that you laugh at everything than to be so wise that-everything makes you cry Some disappointments yon care little about but others sink to the bottom of yonr heart like lead and hurt When a woman is really an angeL she is not ope qf the recording kjud that keeps a lot of books on people A man's idea of a nice woman is ono who pays most attention to the things he says and the least to the things he does Occasionally you see a girl with fS gold pieces for bangles on her bracelet and a lonely nickel in her pocket-book If a man controls his wrath with the first oflender -his temper gets that much the better of him -with the second How easy it is for a man to persuade himself that the box Ills new piano came in does not look disorderly In the front yard The very little man who marries a very large woman may know more than his wife but It never looks as if he would dare to day ao Whether an hour Is a late one or not depends upon whether it is the time the wife comes home from church social or the husband from the olub The hardest workers do not get the biggest rewards The tired-out farm horse complains that there never was a tired-out farm horse put in statuafy When we hear of the salaries some Eeopls are paid for singing we cannot elp thinking of the larger salaries that ought to be paid others for hot singing When the baby is fretful the meat burnt the baking a failure the dinner late and the husband cross a woman knows how it feels to be a man and have impatient customers come in and kick It is safe to say that there pever was a funeral of a married persotvtbati someone on the way baok from the cemetery did not say something about the short time it would be before the one who is left wuld marry again If the truth were known the ooantry man is not so in town as the town man is in the country The difference is in the size of the audience When a country man shows town ignorance there are a great many to see it When a town man shows country ignorance ho one but a single farmev sees it and he is very often too polite to tell of Atchison Globe JOSH BILLIXGS' PHILOSOPHY popular actors would only remember which he had kept so long-and coin this they would be saved of pared thein with the things which Betsinda wore In Betsinda's little dodging Burlington Free Press mm insane asylum and it was whispered i cltna a nrri i xi rt 4 VJ Ir i a ol'nF Ten million eggs were burned in a sponds to the commonly accepted term of ghost or as with Spiritualists the spirit or part seen by them at their seances with the diderence as explained by the teachings of the brotherhood that the geist is only that OUUU IV II Alb VV Uf A tUttOiV a to the itoyal Family so in the othur shoe was written "Hopkins maker to the royal family" In the inside Chicago fire recently and now poor actors tread the boards I with the confident assurance of stars of the pgr zSg? Betsinda's piece of cloak was embroi first magnitude Danville Breeze part of man which is the shade of his mortal life bearing the ideas likes dered "priii rosal:" in the other piece of cloak was embroidered "cess ba An "Uncle Tom's cabin" company and dislikes and disposition that it did when in the mortal body on earth The geist remains as a io lb So that When On the Very Crown Women whose hairdrossing is cx ut together No 246 you read "Prlncues Ilosalba ba Evenlne Colffurps One does not often see natural was snowed in for ten days during the recent Western blizzard This must have turned the company's dates Topsy-turvy Rochester Post-Express GOOD POINTS OF A IIOTTCSl-: tremely elaborate cling to the high coirlure for evening 80 do those to whose peculiar style of beauty the plume-like knot on the very crown rule about the scenes of its earthly career although having the power to go to other parts of the world in answer to the summons or fiowers as hair ornaments but white hyacinths were worn by a fretlhy Southern girl at Mrs Mary Bryan's lends force and piquancy Newer than the triple fillets for" hair orna one evening recently lier white silk Josephine dress was short in the waist rather request of those people com-monly called mediums who are fitted to hold communications with the spirit or geists of those dead This spir ments are the single bands of eold as the impress own costumes and which are quite wide across the top of tne neaa ana taper to mere bangle On seeing this the dear oia wooaman fell down on his knee saying: mO my Princess my gracious royal lady 0 my rightful Queen of Crim Tartary 1 hail thee I acknowledge thee I do thee And in token of his fealty ho rubbed his venerable nose three times on the ground and put the Princess' foot on his head "Why" said she "my good woodman you must be a nobleman of my royal lather's court!" For in her lowly retreat and under tho name of Betsinda her Majesty Rosalba Queen of Crim Tartary had read of the customs of all foreign courts and nations "Marry indeed aril I my gracious pinned at the bosom was a cluster of the odorous flowers Her brown hair wires before they hook across under itual communication is not encouraged however because in the first place the geist can only tell of what that Oliphant when he demanded the return of that which was his had been threatened with a similar fate by the prophet Certain of the other wealthy members of the brotherhood had died suddenly and mysteriously and no accounting of their money nad ever been rendered by Harris Still other members made desperate by the hard and cruel conditions of the commands which Harris assured them came direct from Clod cbmmitted suicide The children of members in obedience to the orders of the prophet were suffered to grow up in utter ignorance Finally in 1SS3 many of thoso who surrounded Harris at Santa Rosa revolted against his rule and demaded a division of the property of the brotherhood Under pressure Harris finally gave to each of the deserters a part of what belonged to them retaining Jbr himself a farm of 1500 acres completely stocked Now that they have broken away from Harris some of his former dupes do not hesitate to place upon record their estimate of his character "I can no longer receive you as master" one of them wrote him not long since "as in my ignorance and superstition I once did I wrought with my hands and toiled and rendered you superstitious labor for many years And what can you do for me? Can yov teach mo anything useful the back hair Most of these are Mvas dressed low and hyacinths match- chased in elaborate patterns Some uig tuose on her breast peeped out lias happened to ltselt on earth and secondly its disposition if bad is from behind the pink tips of her ears are brilliantly jeweled some show beautiful filigree or cut-gold designs often to deceive and mislead To this A few of the most novel abandon the latter disposition of many are attrib statuesque classical notion and be ute the unsatistactory results ob come tiny handkerchief corners of A short straight back and a straight rump Plenty of breadth and fullness between the eyes The eye should be full and in color a hazel is good A small thin ear well thrown forward and a straight elegant face A square muzzle with large nostrils to let in plenty of air to the lungs The withers should be high and the shoulders well set back and broad but not too deep in the chest For the under side of the head a good horse should be well cut under the jowl with jawbones broad and well apart under the muzzles The fore leg should be short A pretty straight hind leg with the hock low down the pastern joint of good length and a medium broad foot gold lace that have fluttered down Once this winter I have Been Spanish veil worn as a hair ornament and a covering for the head instead of the large hat in the theatre It was iait week at Salvini's performance of "Ihe Outlaw" The eilect of the lace draped over the blonde tresses for tfldly enough it was not a brunette who revived the fashk and about the liege the poor Lord Spuiachi once among the waving curls and flash the humble woodman these fifteen tained by mediums at spiritualistic meetings The second nature or the spiritual part is the soul immortal This part lies in complete repose after the mortal existence is ended awaiting the resurrection the resurrection back their point applique patterns at years syne liiver since tne tyrant you in diamonds lhese are held in position by gold wires and sometimes Padella (may ruin overtaRe the treacherous knave!) dismissed me from my the lace is left as it lies sometimes it being the union ot the ghost nature post of First Lord" is folded into a fan and sometimes it "1-irst Lora ot the loothpicK and is knotted into a bow with the soul and not the resurrection of the body in the flesh as is commoaly accepted in the term Joint Keeper of the Snulf-box? I A coronet which I noticed in a jew eler's showcase yesterday was sur mounted with three diamond swal In this tenor ran the teachings of lows Another had a flight of butter flies in diamonds and emeralds A third had a crescent with a star within taroat was much more artistic than stidhess of the average bonnet Combs seem to be the one cniversal idea in hair fashions At one of the last weddings before Lent the groom gave each of the bridesmaids a blonde tortoise-shell high comb in a case Bonde tortoise-shell is a material which makes such an offering "all around" quite "princely" and combs arelmost as becoming as they are popular If the face is stately then the comb lends it additional dignity on the contrary it is piauant the WQib has the eilect of a pretty Masquerade and etiectively points the itantine styier as is the case for in its horn and a fourth a bat which fly SOME REDFERN MODELS Prepared Expressly for Thk American by Itedfern the New Yorif Ladies Tailor I luv praze but despise flattery Rum dice and lasciviousness bring all men tew one common level The best way tew convince a phool he iz wrong iz tew lethim hav hix lng oeast 01 darkness is becoming a favorite with women who are or have reasons for wishing to be thought near-sighted and wno point to the own way brilliant pin or pendant as emblem of Tew do nothing and tew be ot no infirmity whicn must be taken as an use tew ennybody iz the privilege ov wild beasts all-sufficient excuse for not having recognized a person The time tew pray is not when we stance the Spanish women in Don-nat's "Quartette" at the Metropolitan Museum An aigrette of diamond flowers set among leathers is very beautiful and are in a tight spot but jist as soon as we git out ov it quite outdoes in fashionable estima mere IS one nf nnmon'a hcanflsD litre is one ot woman's There iz 2 things in this life foi wnicu tor many years past she giveu Irankly to the world has not tion the natural or the French made posy Jewels and flower chaplets are whioh we are never fully prepared aud that iz twins Thin in ijer torehead I call it a hsautv fnr Waiting for a ded man's shoes la HOW 13 sometimes worn together the flower crown matching the trimmings of the evening dress and a comb set with it I )l 1 1 t'r nw -tavann rtf just az mean az stealing the shoes be fore the man dies brilliants emtralds rubies sapphires Every man should kno sumthing ov law if he knows enuff tew keep outov or Imitations rising above the wreath behind The small jeweled side combs are more worn than ever and the it he iz a pretty gooa lawyer TharViz this difference at least be cult' vi tuiuvattd taste to look for instance at tno picture of Laura Keene in the fpJwK lssue of the Century and not the sweetness and serenity hV oawomaa'8face by a tine fore-presen111 Preserving? Just at the brni heair 'arranged more off short lhe lront i not cut so Los? 13 curled in a ahnt i eaf her? mass and tossed up toe the lorehead the ends of it be- Wonw red iQ with tue back hair en 0 whom it is becoming are favored decoration lor tnem is a running vine traced across the top in small brilliants The large combs are very high in shape and flash with tween wit and humor wit makes you think humor makes yon faff I don't think thare iz ennything that jewels a man iz remarkable for that is more kultivated than hiz eccentricitys Orchids in enamel are among the most popular designs in fancy hair About the only difference between Dins These are for blondes and the mind me! Thou Jieldest these posts under our royal sire They are restored to thee Lord Spinachi I make thee knight of th-e second class of our order of the Pumpkin (the first class being reserved for crowned heads alone) Rise Marquis of Spinachi!" And with indescribable majesty the Queen who had no sword handy waved the pewter spoon with which she had been taking her bread and milk over the bald head of the old nobleman whose tears absolutely made a puddle on the ground and whose dear children went to bed that night Lords and Ladies Bartolomeo Ubaldo Catarina and Ottavia degli Spinachi I They gave him a very bad bed-room and Gigiio when he woke in the morning fancying himself in the royal palace at home called: "John Charles Thomas! My chocolate my dressing my slippers" but nobody came There was no bell so he went and bawled out for waiter on the top of the stairs The landlady came up "What are you a hollaring and a beTlaring for here young man says she "There's no warm water no servants my boots are not even cleaned" "He he! Clean 'em yourself" 6ays the landlady "You young students give yourselves pretty airs I never heard such impudence" "I'll quit tho house this instant" says Gigiio "The sooner the better young man Pay your bill and be oif All my rooms is wanted for gentlefolks and not for such as you" "You may well keep the Bear Inn" said Gigiio "You should have yourself painted as the sign" The landlady or the Bear went away growling And Gigiio returned to his room where the first thing he saw was the fairy bag lying on the table which seemed to give a little hop as he came in "1 hope it has some breakfast in it" says Gigiio "for I have only a very little money left" But on opening the bag what do yon think was there? A blacking brush and a pot of Warren's Jet and on tho pot was written: Poor young men their boots must blaclt Use ma and wik me aud put irya back So Gijglio laughed and blacked his boots and put back the brush and the bottle into the bag When he had done dressing himself the bag gave another little hop and ho went to it and took out 1 A tablecloth and napkin 2 A sugar basin full of the best loaf sugar 4 0 8 10 Two forks two teaspoons two knives and a pair of sugar tongs stems are set thickly with emeralds the poor and rich is this the poor suffer misery while the rich hav tu enjoy it oar rolL tk Jhfh 3 43 smau as yet ana Dull red clover heads with diamond dewdrops are afiected by brown-haired Yn ma mftkft ft wKissel nnt nv a nirr' cimK i vers it is curiea ineu Ca? and thrown up in soft belles The long gold pins witn sim nle twists lor the heads which have the 'oi i aisSusing the presence of spilte a very wurthy tale and got a been vogue for daylight wear the past a lew love loons are aided to vear or two alter very little uvjui me lempien auu oov lyovp I ill but seldom anything I wouldn't giv a dime a pound for Lent is the season for the half-low bodice which comes out in new shapes i'ac can hi: No 23 TnrT fropeny be called a bang religion that yu kant take ennywhere out intu the world with yu even tew a constantly at informal evenings At biondi who are tall and splendid Wlth oft and pale gold hair ono of the week's receptions' there horse race if yu hav a mind tew without losing it was not a dress that was high not Undulation dress it a la one that would be considered decol low forehead and The best reformers are those who lete The pretty half-revelations of Vui leatures and it makes them are all the time trieing tew reform throat and neck are altogether charming Opinion seems to diiler as to the themselfs thus presenting tew the world one goodrxample worth at usefulness of tne bonnet as an accom paniment to demi-dress and while most bare the head others permit themselves a covering Ellen Osbobn "VL-t' DOLLARS AND SENSE No 2 4 a "No 21 There are many essentials required to make a complete garment perfect fit agood cut thorough finish and Rrtmfl men earn 10 by way of Xer- Traveller The fellow who carries his pocket' to complete the list that indefinable something we call "style" liealern owes the position he now holds to his earnest and unremitting attention to these little details which taken singly are trivial but united make all the diflerence between a coat and gown of his creation and those one sees turned out by the score by masters lacking his artistic diligence and skill The cut of one of his new coats is here presented to readers of the Sunday American As a notable example of his methods this coat is simply a plain tight-fitting single-breasted coat The little adornments he has book in his hip pocket has money back of Binghamton Republi can least a dozen precepts Very Much of a Fraud The so-called two-headed calf that was exhibited here last Monday at a dime a peep proved to be very much of a fraud It was only a diseased calf with a big bump on its head that had not the least semblance of another Dresden Enterprise Wrong "The mill will never irrltid -With the water thai is Who said it wouldn't poet? ISow tloutf ou be no fast Because you see you're For some yards down the stream You'll find the boilers poeW With which Uki make the steam Washington Star A Tax on Her Air We used the iihraee "as free as alr" To lips often springs It will not though fit anywhere To air that Paul sings Budget DrASmvthe mint superintendant is features The cloth employea is a very iignt maxe oi west or iingiana Droauciotu oi a peculiar snaae ot plongron tinvr i -lace where he can make An i (rrey the AODy COliar cuus uu unsucn uu mccvea uuiiJ ui uHiiuiiC ui iuuuiliuk tunc -fY allium line OI some New Orleans Picayune riarrv a dollar and a nickel in a mixed Silver ana grey BOUtactie oufcimea mo iruub oeiv ana Biaaiica jvi diocco jLuovua io uiunuieniBU wim a smau pattern in the Bame braid This coat can be worn with or without the belt When the belt is used a large clasp or buckle of antique silver can be worn with eflect Other colors can of course bo employed and other materials the Btvle of the coat remaining the same and a butterKnue an marxea Docket with a hole in it and you will 4 No lhe nex cm is aiiogemer oi uiucreiiii cnaracier me lunu-nw cmpiujcu ueiu icuciiuu ciobii oi mo flnPKt naalltv The Ion loose coat fronts are of "wren's-ccrg blue" the tight-fitting vest of military white The full lose the dollar and save the nickel Atchison Globe They Don't Want It The mercury's low the wind la high There's ice beneath our fret And few are the maiden" now who sigh i Ioiiit fur an lee-creain treat blue sleeves fall loosely over a tight and long cutf of white ornamented with four buttons corresponding with those used nn the front of vest The buttons employed are quite a feature of tko coat being exquisite little examples of the 11 12 13 A teacup saucer and slop-basin 14 A jug full of delicious cream 15 A canister with black tea and green 16 A large tea urn and boiling water 17 A saucepan containing three eggs nicely done The Grecian Coll finest Parisian make The collar ana waist are just marked witn a small pattern oi nana-Draiaing in a mixea cord ot woman whose lo aim the in life is modes no bright and oxydized silver The back is tight-fitting A hat of white cloth- trimmed with bluo velvet to match coat feathers and ribbon is made to go with the coat Boston Courier fcajx qa the.

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2,723,576
Years Available:
1834-2024