THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , * PKPEMBEIl 17 , 1808-TW KXTY 10 CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR BOYS Jlaril to Please Urn Boy "Too Old for His Past and Tco Young for Hii Future. " JIVE CHAMELEONS FASHION'S ' LATEST FAD lion- nil Antrln-lndlnn Ilrlilo Dcfentrit the Iron \Vlll nf a I'ntlior liy ( living an iintilintlo : "Nn ! " nt tlin Altnr. Perhaps the most difficult person on the holiday list is the boy of tlio family thocno who is just about quitting knickerbockers , but has not qtilto reached the stage oj long trousers. Ilia tastes are as uncertain as his clothes. JIo Is in tlio transition , state in moro than his garments. There is plenty of tlic boy in him still , bat there is as well moro than a hint of the coming man \vhich reduces him to a condition llmt may be summed up as too old for his past and too young for his future. And now to mnko happy his doubtful present is tlio problem which is distract ing ills elders at the moment , nays the Now York Times. The boy's mother is the only member of his clrclo of ac quaintances who iinilcrstatids what to iflvo him. Depend upon her knowing Ills closest and most unsuspected ambi tion and gratifying it , too , ' if it bo a possible thing. His other parent , however , and ins grandparents , with his sisters and his cousins and his aunts , and all the rest keep a blank against his nn mo on their holiday list , groaning uvory tlmo they como to it , in an agony of helplessness : "What shall I give Tom1-or Dick , or Harry , as thecaso may bo-"What in the world do boys want ? " The mistake lies at the very outset in thinking that ho wants something en tirely dilToront from the rest of the world. They don't want a sot of china , certainly , nor a pair of bracelets , but many things that occur readily to an in tending giver to bo bestowed upon their eisters would equally delight them. Ono boy rejoiced for months over Christmas gift of llowering bulbs , which ho tended with patient care , finding am ple reward in watching their growth from the moment the tiny shoots ap peared. Another boy was so delighted last autumn with a pair of fresh curtains iu his rather 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 Clans has been instructed to bring him a duplicate. Tlio Bister , too , is making a pair of pil low shams for it , getting her suggestion from a remark of his , on seeing hers , that those "gimcracks wore lino. " 13oyn like pretty things much oftcuer than they got them. And they try in their blundering , cubbish way to live up to them. "Say , mother , " whispered a boy in her car once , "I want n ring with a blood- etono in it. Will you got me one ? " " .On that hand ; " ' laughed the mother , significantly tapping the ono which rested on the arm of her chair , as ho leaned over her shoulder. Such a grimy hand it wasl Tlio boy laughed , too , and drew it away a little shamefacedly. "Oil , I'd keep 'era clean , " he said , "if I had a ring. " The next holiday'thb coveted ring was forthcoming. Tlio boy was delighted , and the leaven of that ring was soon vis ible all over his toilet. * "What . " a lovely pin. "How well they get up those things now. The little reptile looks so per fectly natural ono would almost swear -ug ! " "All , It's alive. Horrid little bcastl" "Oh , don't como near me. How can . yon wear such creopj , crawly things ? " The Stanford university girl , to whom those remarks were addressed by a , couple of less strongmindcd companions , Bin 11 oil calmly and oven stroked the soft , eliky skin of the creature that 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 know > it and was happy , says the San Francisco I Call."Now what is there to bo afraid of ? " i eho asked , an the two frightened girls 1 paused in the doorway and looked with J round eyes at the chameleon as though < k it was a rattlesnake at least. "All the K university girls are getting them and > f they are just as harmless as Hies. See { ' hero , " and as she spoke the girl from j , tlio classic shades of Stanford loosened J- a tiny gold pin , which was attached to a I ] chain around the chameleon's ' neck , I , throw tlio little reptile bodily onto the table and pricked the pin in the clpth. i "Why , it's green , and it was brown a IL moment ago , " paid ono of the other two 1 girls , drawing a stop nearer. fl "What a cute little tiling , " added the | ( othor. isn't its bite venomous ? " k "It can't bite , " replied the young indy from Stanford. "There is not anything I more harmless than chameleons. They i just live on Hies and soft candy llcas , A lee , if they can get them. Why , [ just | j keep this chained to my pincushion M when I am not wearing it , and the little thing sleeps most of the time. It changes color , too. " fl "Poor creature"said ono of the other girls pityingly. "How different the pincushion - cushion must be from its native grass. I am sorry for the little beast , particularly [ f it bo so gentle. " "Ah , but it is the fashion to wear thorn , replied the othor. And the little lizard-shaped reptile M raid nothing , for the good reason that the ] > ewers of speech are denied it. Tlio probability is , however , that it limit ) its , m gold chain just about as pleasant a bauble to carry as some kings are said ' to have found thotr golden crowns. The ; dignity is great , but the happiness ! I However , no one asks tlio chameleons ; what they think , It is the latest fad to , I wear them , and consequently they uro i Worn , * fc ' * * ' m If all young women wore like Miss * 1 Amy Lnmlwrt It would bo a training tel l | parents in the way tliey should go. Mr. rfl Lambert , the father of Miss Amy , was a > - signaller in the government telegraph NB ollico at Allahabad , India. Probably ho had been inllnonccd by what ho saw of life in India , says the Now York Sun. At any rate , ho regarded his diuightnr much as ho did the t 'ephono ' instru- luents in his ollico. t.'Mh ' those he pressed u button and it recorded whnt- ever lib wanted it to. Ho expected Miss Amy to do the earno. Filially Mr. I'asfiiini , u dusky gentleman in the em- Dloy t > ( a native prince , met tlio daughter - tor of the signaller and she pleased him. Bho was so eminently satisfactory to his M fancy timt ho forthwith announced to I her father that ho wished to marry her. I The telegraph operator thought it I over. Court gentlemen , even if rather I Hwartliy ones , were not to bo had every I day , and it behooved the father of a if family of duugiiters to allow possible t | wooers to como early und often. So ho , ! announced to Miss Amy that her future , was arranged for , und to prepare for the | ] tvudding on snob and such a day. Wiion I the astonished young woman recovered 1 from her surprise two assured her father that she liked uot the rnjuh'a brunette courtlor , and that to the best of her knowledge the wedding would not nome olT. Her father pooh-poohed this out- hurst , told her to draw on him for all she needed for a suitable trousemi , and took himself off to drink with his future Bon-ln-lnw. Then it was that Miss Amy Lambert " made up her mind ns to "a course of action. During the succeeding weeks , although she repeatedly and decisively told her father that she could not and would not bo hnppy with Mr. Passnnn , she nevertheless , finding that no heed was paid to her remonstrances , joined with interest in the preparations for the wedding. At last the day of the ceremony - mony arrived. Miss Amy Lambert , dressed in n beautiful now eown , and with a pleasant consciousness"that she had mere now clothes at homo than she hud ever dreamed of possessing all at once , redo to the church In company with her father , who , beholding her placid and satisfied face , told himself what a wise father ho had been. "All ono needs , " said the telegraph operator to himself , "is a little firmness. Silly girls should never bo allowed to have their own way in those matters. " And all the time the bride-elect smiled softly to herself , as If her thoughts were peculiarly pleasant , The clergyman , Kov. I3rook Dccdes , thought ho had never seen a happier looking couple , and began the ceremony with the warm ox pectatlon of a goodly fee. llo bowled merrily along until he reached the ques tion : "Will you have this man to bo your wedded husband ? " Ho expected a faint " 1 will , " but was almost paralyzed to receive an emphatic negative from the young woman , who at the same time handed him a document setting forth some of her objections. Of course , the wedding did not eomo off. The guests dispersed in various di rections , some of them going to condole with the determined young woman's father , who was expected to bo much downcast Strange to say , however , ho was so delighted with his daughter's strategy that lie was quite hilarious over the alTuir , and did not oven bo- grudge-hor the flno now wardrobe she hud acquired. What became of the bridegroom , history ( in the shape of the Allahabad News ) does uot record , but after this ho will probably not attempt to marry un lingtish girl against her will. * Mrs Cleveland has been interviewed by a LJoston Globs correspondent as to how girls should bo educated. If the small Huth and Esther are brought up according to their mother's expressed opinion ] they will bo taught , abwvc all , everything that it is possible to know of homo duties. "I do not mean , ' ' says Mrs. Cleveland , "that they should necessarily bo made to scrub floors or go into the kitchen to scour pots and pans. I think if a girl enjoys thorough opportunities of observing her mother's methods of managing domestic afTuirs she will ac quire all that is necessary for the mis tress of a household to know of such matters. Of purely ornamental educa tion , I think a knowledge of the modern languages highly advantageous , as Euro pean travel is now very general and the pleasure of a trip abroad is greatly heightened if one knows something of the languages of the different countries visited. " * In spite of the fact that men poke fun at what they call "women's fixings , " ' they know full well that it is these very "fixiugb" that make the hpmo so pretty and delightful after the day's work In store and factory is done. e Lamps and cushions , especially , add to the cheerful ness and c07iness ol 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 contents of her dainty work basket. Some of the now lamp shades arc made of many rulllcs of silk muslin , each edged with narrow black lace. They are laid over a cover of China silk and overlap each other in a sort of billowy fashion , lied , yellow and pink nro the prettiest colors for these shades , lUbbon rosettes are the newest decoration for cushions and work baskets. The pillows are made of India sillc in pale shades and arc cov ered with a sheer piece of lawn em broidered with a border of small flowers , done in wash silks. This cover is at tached to the silk cover at each corner by the little rosettes , which can bo made to resemble double hollyhocks , 4t V- The twelve dresses which the town of Lyons has presented to the empress of Iviissiu arc : A dross of palest green yel vet in Henry II. style , trimmed with black feathers ; a dross of pale dead- blue satin embroidered with trails of heliotrope flowers and green leaves ; a dross of heliotrope velvet ; another of pale blue moire trimmed in such a way with half crushed roses that they look as if they wore lightly strewn over it ; a gown of cream-colored cut velvet ; another of ivorv silk , and a satin dress of "suiibet" shades , that Is enough to make any woman who looks at it sick with envy ; also one of reddish pink , vel vety silk stitched , with golden stars , and , finally , a dress of silk that , looks exactly like silver. Fiishliiii .S'otiix. Large buttons in horn or nickel arc in high favor. Two-toned laces with insnrtings to match are fashionable. Some newly imported costumes of flno black India cloth are trimmed gn bcdice and sleeves with ermine fur. Bourdon , Venetian , a flno imitation of thread , Spanish guipure , point do Gone , and real duchess are the luces in great est use. Tiny collarettes for the theater , opera , and like dressy uses are made of watered silk , embroidered or braided cloth , fur and luce , and brocade. Small ostrich tips , about a finger long , backed by feather aigrettes mounted upon gold hair pins , will be worn tills winter witli full dress. Now opera wraps are of ermine in loose box shape with very largo sleeves of black , green or ruby , with collarette to match , edged with the fur. Hats turned up in front and those with brims cut in the middle and rollcd'lmck , BO as to give a hrimlesa olTcut , are popu lar , pretty and very becoming to some faces. faces.Wide Wide bias pieces of velvet drawn through "jowoled" or jot buckles and slightly puffed to give them a broad oll'ect , trim the fronts of small primrose bonnets and toques. Added basques and paniors , also panels and apron overskirts , continue to appeal for patronage , but , notwithstand ing this , a certain roburvo is being Bteadily maintained. Jot in every form will bo more in vogue than over crowns , bunds , aigrettes , buckles and sprays being eagerly sought for hat and bonnet deco ration by both young and old. Cream-colored crepe do Cliino com bined with fuchsia red velvet forms a very pretty theater waist , and another dainty creation is pink cropon made up with black velvet and jotted bunds. Ulovcti tills winter follow the shades of the toilet or street costume. White , primrose , flesh pink and Spanish yellow for evening , and gray , brown , tun , green and fawn color for the street. Apparently "fashion said , lot there bo eoqulns and there were sequins , " for nil of tt Hudduu they have flushed out 011 bodices and yokes , sometimes entirely covering the waist down to the belt. Some of the new molros have a ribbed surface which does not preclude the in troduction of satin dots , or the addition of floral or other ] mtcrn.i In chine effects , or stripes and bars of velvet. Many fashionable women Continue to wear the white and yellow chamois street gloves , as they are warmer than dressed kid , or oven suede gloves , and when they lit well arc rather dressy lu effect. Uorthns , collarettes , Inco frills , jabots and fichus are peremptorily demanded by present fashion. The style of arrang ing the boditio just now greatly favors the elaborate use of these dainty and be coming accessories. Honnots this winter are diminutive af fairs indeed , and elderly women who seek in vain for a genuine protection for the head are obliged to take up with the iJinpiro round hats and have strings added to give them a bonnet effect. Decided contrast In color and fabric is the order 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 tollots 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 , whore it appears nt all sorts of func tions , from the hysterically ecstatic 5 o'clock tea to the gorgeous pageant of the swell wedding. Black lace Insertions are in great use thia season in inch and two-inch widths laid flatly on the dross fabric and not in serted as formerly : so that at present they appear with a tiny purled finish. Lace edgings to match are sold from thro * to ten inches in black and like wise in cream , ecru and milk white. A fabric which lias been taken up with much favor is line Uarlin feltwhich in cream white , rale yellow and golden olive is made into table covers and sofa pillows. Thcso are bordered with flowers , arabesque designs , and garlands in shaded silks or wools mixed with gold and bronze threads. I'emlnlnn Notes. Sir Edwin Arnold says that there are about . ' 10,000 "poetesses" in Great Brit ain. ain.A A fever thermometer is now made in chatelaine form for the use of trained nurses. Dental inspection lias been introduced in the public schools of Detroit by Mrs. S. G. Holdon. Heidelberg university has formally opened its doors to women. A daughter of the late Prof. WindscncUl is the first to avail herself of this privilege. Mine. Tolstoi , the wife of the eminent reformer and author , received a diploma from the Moscow university when she was 17 years old. A year later she was married , her husband being twenty years her senior. At last the identity of the author of "Tho Heavenly Twins" has been re vealed. Mine. Sarah Grand is.known to her friends as Mrs. McFall. She is "do- scribed as a slender , graceful young woman , possibly , ' ! 0 years old. Mrs. Amelia 1C. Barr has taken the place formerly occupied by Mrs. Bur nett as the best paid female author in America. She otton receives $5,000 for the serial rights tb a novel and her shorter work is proportionately well paid for. While female suffrage lias carried the day in New Zealand It has experienced defeat in South Australia , where the adult suffrage bill , which embodied the principle , was rejected in the popular house on the third reading , but only by a narrow majority. A young1 woman named Horace Oreely Perry is the editor and pro prietor of the St. Peter , Minn. , .louriml. For a long time she and her sister did all the work of thu nuncr. and did it M > successfully that they finally received the contract for the county printing. Mrs. Maddern , an English writer , has been making fun of Chinese for wearing pigtails. She , no doubt , is ignorant of the fact that it is not so long ago since Englishmen sported pigtails aud English women wore hair cushions on their heads. A peculiar advertisement recently appealed in an Knglish paper. A woman describing herself as "a lady with spare time daily" offers to play bev.ique with invalids or other persons desiring a partner in the game. She wanted re muneration , and concludes by asking "what offers ? " Of sixty-seven queens of Franco only thirteen have died without leaving their histories a record of misery. Eleven wore divorced , two executed , nine died yotng , seven wore soon widowed , throe cruelly treated , three exiled : the poi soned and broken hearted make up the rest. rest.Tho The wife of W. D. Howclls has always been a true helpmate to her husband In iiis literary labors , in which sfto naturally takes a vital interest. Ho is in the habit of consulting her about his plots , and ho submits to her everything he writes , before It ia permitted to reach the printer. Miss .fesslo Ackermann , president of the Australian Woman's Christian Tem perance union , has , during the last IIvu years , traveled over 100,000 miles , and converted ! ) ,000 women and 8,000 , men , besides writing about 700 newspaper ar ticles and raising $ ! ) ,000 for the cause. Miss Ackormaim is now lecturing in London , At Nagoya , in China , a merchantwho is in his U5th year , has just divorced his twenty-sixth wife and is about to marry the twenty-seventh , JIo had resolved when ho was young to marry thirty wives , and is delighted that ho has now only throu moro to marry to keep his vow. vow.Now Now It is the overworked barmaid who is enlisting the sympathies of English agitators of the woman question , It is reckoned thai there are J 120,000 , young women in licensed houses who work from fifteen to over eighteen hours on week days , and from seven to iilnoou Sundays , with one Sunday oil' in each month. Louise Michel is expected in Now York very soon , the European papers say. Tills famous.woman is very dis tingue. Mine. Seine of Paris SUVH of her that she has a countenance like a daylight dream , her figure being molded to realize the soft dignity of her de meanor. Her head is classical in shape and her eyes mild , fearless and full of expression , Little Minnie Terry , aged a , was once taken to see her Aunt Ellen UB Juliet. In the seeno where Juliet drinks her potion , Miss Terry was clad in white robes of a dressing gown or robe do unit order. At this point little Minnie , who hud a decided idea of thu proprieties , turned to Mr. Gilbert , who chanced to bo in the box. "No , no ! " she exclaimed , putting her small lingers over ills eyes , "You .mustn't look ! " In the tailors' workshop of the Co operative Society of Glasgow the women were lately taking work at lower wages than wore generally paid to men. The men accordingly demanded that the women should be dismissed , and struck when their demand was refused , The tailors' union made peace by arranging that the women should bo paid the sumo wages as the men , a rather novel but riO ' OUR EFFORTS- To make this the greatest rug week , arc worthy your attentions t Fur Rugsl Mounted animals , Red Fox wolf , wild cat , etc. , $ S , $10 , 12 $ Real Angora skins , in all shades , $ S. White , black and gray China goat 28x64 inches , $2,50 Smyrna rugs , 30x60 inches , $2/25 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. 25 per cent off our entire line : 100 styles : Out of town orders will be sent on approval : I 1&14-1G-18 Douglas St. iV , essentially just way Of settling the ques tion. " > A medical journSlj declares that no woman doctor over earned a living be fore 1800. It says : "No respectable family iu any commonly respectable neighborhood1- would let rooms to a woman physician. U-Jyen when friends gave her shelter a business card or sign was not allowed. The lack of practical training was really the stumbling block and the cause of all this prejudice. " Verily , times hav6 changed. A writer in the Pall Mall Gazette thinks that duchesses and dictionaries know too little of each other. "The greater the swell , the worse she will spell , " declares ho. "A largo gilt coronet net on u letter has sheltered the most prodigious blunders. Ono of the most gracious salon homers in jjonaou com mits literary solecisms that would wreck train. ' 'Tis ' ' a only pretty Fanny's way1 ! and if Fanny happens to be a duchess her errors will not in the least affect her position. The reminiscent woman is now the fad. You will hardly believe it but it is true , that the fashion is to talk of great things you have done or wonderful people you have mot. Society women expand upon their trips abroad. Busi ness women chat of thomonoy they have earned. Literary women indulge in harangues about geniuses they have met. Tide and time seem to wait for woman while she punctuates her conver sation with "what I did some years ago. " The empress dowager of China is said to have "great influence with her nephew , the present emperor of China. To her advice it is believed the neutral ity of China in the Franco-Siamese dis pute is duo She is reported to. have told the emperor when ho sought her advice that his first duty was to lool : after the .security , wealth and happiness of his own country , and that China was not strong enough for aggression , and should therefore leave Siam to its fate , which Siam had formerly done to China. A1'ow of tlin Noluhlo Features oT Mlil- vrlntrr Monthlies. December Century prints a hitherto un published ossiy : by James Hiissoll Ix > woU oa "Tho Five Indispensable Authors. " There are certain books , lie says , which it is necessary to read , but they are very few. Ivooldnp at the matter from an tusthollo point of vlow merely 1 should say tlmt thus fur only ono man Mad born nblo to use types so universal , and to draw flgurcs so cosmo politan that they nro equally trtio m all languages and equally acceptable to tlio whole Indo-European .brunch , at lenst , of thn hiinuui family. ( Time man is Homer , and there needs , It seems 19 me , no further proof of his Individual existence than this very f.ict of the solitary unapproachable- ness of the "Jliad" and the "Odyssey.1' ' The moro woncter/ul they are the moro likely to bo the work of ono person. Nowhere - where 13 the purely natural man prcsento to us so nobly and sincerely as in ttics poems. Not far below tlicsu I should pluco the "JJlvina Conuncdlft" ofDantc , , in which the history of the spiritual man is akotchcd with equal command of material and ( rraiulour of outline. Don Qulxolo stands upon the suinu level , and receives thq s.imo universal ap preciation. Hero wo have tv r | > ! ritu.U and the uutural mun set before us in humorous contrast. In thu knight and his squlro Cer vantes 1ms ty pi lied thu two opposing poles of our duul nature the .Imagination and the understanding as they appear m contradic tion. This is the 'Only ' comprehensive satlro over written , for H is utterly independent of time , place and manners. Faust gives us thu natural history of the human Intellect , Mcphlstophulns being mciclytho projected impersonation of that skepticism whlchjj'i the Invariable result of a purely Intellectual culture. These four books are the only ones iu which universal facts of human nature and experience uro ideally represented. They can therefore never bo displaced , * * 1 huvouot mentioned Shaltospcaro , because liia works rome under u different category. Tlioueh they tnarlc the very highest level nf human genius , they yet represent no special upouh in the history of the Individual mind. The man of ShukcspcaraUalwaysthomnn of actual life us ho is uuicd upon by the worlds of seuso and of spirit under certain dolliilto conditions. Wo all of us may bo in the poni- tlou of Macbeth or Othello or Hamlet , and wo appreciate iticlr sayings imd dcods poten tially , so to speak , rather than actually , through the sympathy of our common nature and not of our experience. A Mexican Frontier Ilnll. Ono night the patron gave n bailo , writes Frederick ; Remington in Harper's. The vaifuoros came with their girls , and a string baud rondnred music with ; i very duncy swing. I sat in a corner and observed the man who weirs the Dig hat und who throws the rawhida as he cavorted about with his girl , and the way they ilujr up the dust out of the dirt floor soon put mo to coughing. "Candles shed their soft luster and tallow" down the backs of our necks , and the bund scraped and thrummed away in a most seri ous manner. One man had a harp , two had primitive fulules and one a guitar. One old tiddler was the leader , and as he bowed his head on his instrument I could not keep my eyes off him. Ho had como from Sonorn , and was very old ; ho looked ns Ihouirh he had had his share of a very rough life ; ho was never handsome ns a boy , I am sure , but the weather und starvation and time had blown him aim crumbled him into n. . ruin which resembled - semblod the pre-existing npo from which the races sprunp. If ho had never com mitted murder it was for lack of oppor tunity , and Souora is a long travel from Plymouth Hock. Tom Bailey , the foreman , came round tome mo , his eyes dancing , and his shock of hair standing up like a Circassian beauty's , and pointing , ho said , "Thar's a woman who's prattler than a speckled pup ; mil your twine on her. " Then , ns muster of ceremonies , ho strajghtoned up and sang out over the fiddles and noisn : "iance , thar , you fellers , or you'll git the gout. " In an adjoining room there was a very heavy Jug of strong water , and thither the men repaired to pick up , so that ns the night wore on their brains began to whirl lifter their legs , ami they whooped nt times in a way to put ono's nerves on edge. The band scraped the harder and the ilanco waxed fABt , the spurs clinked , and bang , bang , bang went the Winchester rlllcsin the patio , while the chorus "Viva cl patron" rang around the room the Old Guard was in action. Tlio Jnriisnluin of Tnilny. The present population of Jerusalem Is not far from ' 10,000 , and more than half nro Jews , writes Charles A. Dana in McUlnru's. They live in n separate quarter of their own , as do also the various divisions of Christians , as the Armenians , the Greeks and the Protestants' . All those quarters uro densely built , with narrow and irregular lunos for .streets , hut the prevailing prosperity docs not seem to reach the abodes of the Hubrows. The indications nro all of extreme poverty. A synagogue was pointed out bearing un hi' scrlptlon showing that It was the gift of a Paris Kolhschlld ; but its moan appearance and unattractive surroundings bore no sug gestion of critical rclinomont In the congre gation. The articles of food set out for sale In the petty little shops were often squalid and repulsive. AVe came so often upon spoiled salt fish among the stores exposed by the venders , that wo concluded it must form a regular element of diet in the quarter. There was no visible sign of industry by which the people might earn their living ; and no ono need bo surprised to learn that in various parts of the world well-to-do and charitable Jews are regularly called upon to contribute to the support of thuir pauper brethren in Jerusalem. * * * As wa leave his ill-famed ravine and then toward thu cast the lofty wall of Jerusalem and the massive towers of the citadel are Immediately before us. . Wo arc on the outer sloiiQ of Mount/ion , the sanctuary and the rbodo of David 1 The ponderous blocks wi Ich torin the lower strata of tlio wall might have been shaped and put in place by some prehistoric race of giants. Moro than almost anything else to bu found around Jerusalem , or within , this wall bears an up- poarance of crcat antiquity , ' Wo can easily believe .tat its foundations were laid in the tlin o of David , though its upper portions tions are unquestionably modern. The hooks vary. One says it was the work of Sultan .Suleiman in the bixleenth century ; another , that it was erected much curlier ; and my guide , a most intelligent and well-informed Jew of Hungarian origin , told mo it was built by the Crusaders after they had pot possession , for the purpose of protecting the inhabitants against the rascally Arabs , who would rldu up iu small parlies , rub some rich family , and bo oft' with their plunder before anything could bu done to stop them , iiut , however tills may be , the wiill , from sixteen to twenty feet In height , fully in closes the town ; and , although it could soon bo knocked to pieces by a 10-pounder cannon , It stnnds In good order , solid enough for all peaceful purposes , and perfectly separates thu city from tlio country about it. Now York' * Dimth Trupn , Now York Is breeding a mob In her tene ments ; a mob lhat , so far docile , ivlll some tlmo rise , unless its wrongs are righted , und right them for itself. Three-fourth ; ; of Now York's population , says u writer in tlio North American Itoviow , live in tenements , und ono-half In tenements of such ifnlmppy character that their baleful inllucudo cannot help but bu marked upon their crowds ; dorn. idles so overcrowded that on their doorways might bo tacked this paraphrase : ' 'All yo who enter here leave decency behind ; " whore only the rent and the death rate are high , und the standards of virtue , cleanli ness and comfort are so low as to scarcely merit consideration ; where self-respect the salvation of the human creature may bo said to reach the vanishing point. There are iu Now York 3-1,007 front tenements and ! ) , yill rear tenements , \vlth a population given by the Board of Health at 370,503 families , com posed of l.SAVH individuals. The total population of the city is l.r.Ut.MJl. Six small down town wards may with conildimco bespoken spoken of as forming the most crowded spot on earth. No obtainable statistics of English or continental cities show a popula tion approaching that of this district of Now York. Nowhere else on the face of the globe are human beings packed together In such compact layers ; no where are there so many of thu layers. The district is in shape AMERICA'S MOTTO. Mine. M. Yale's Excelsior Complexion Remedies AWARDED THE T ft D By the World's ' Columbian Evposilbn. Beauty Oiiltlvati'd , Youth Kontcm-d , WrluUlix ) Ilo- moved , Coiiipli'xICM IlmmllflcU , Skin IH- ! CUHCH Ciiri-il , Gray Hiilr Ti.rnuil Jlaclc to JIB Orliflnal Color Without lyn. EXCEISIORHAIR TONIC Chemistry's Greatest Discovery. For tlio llrBt lliiic ) hi the hlHlnry of llm world , iri'.iy li.'dr it.-in now bu tiirnixt back to Un uutural niul orlKlual color wltliout ilyii. Mini ) . Vnlu'H Kx- I'clsloill.ilr Tonlo t'lvcH circulation to Ihu cuioilin ; multi'rof tlmlmlr , iiqrniaiicntlv iVBlorlnif H to HH own natural Htutu , It IH Indeed Urn most rtnn.-uk- iiblu illhcovory of thonii > . It aim ) tttopn hair falllntr In from ' . ' -I liotirrf to onu ' .vpolt. anil croalnH it lux uriant 1'rowtli , Lad ICH can Uu BOUII whusu liatrlias boon reHlureil. Prlco , SI per Bottle ; G for S5. OS UKMOVKO WITH What Krealcr gift could Mm" . Vale offer Ilio world than hur famous l-'i Frrcki.i. Uxi euro fur FrocUlcti ? II mutters not If J'reoUlfiH liuvo IJTOII iruiii youth loolil mr . l.u l-'nrkla will euro any runt ) In cxlHtunco unil luuvu Ilioiikln clear , smooth and buuutlful. Prlco , SI per Bottle , EXCElM" FOOD COUPON. To every lady puruhaphiK any remedy of Mine Viilo this wcuk a Jar of Skin Food will bo glvuu nvray free , as u test for rcinoviiynvrlnules und every' trace of t e. lliltt folipon , rGpod for ono Miaie. M. " \ BEAUTY AND COMPLEXION SPECIALIST. CUl Knrtmcli ISlock , - Uuiuha , Nob. aii Irregular square , bounded on the north by Fourteenth street , on thu cast and south by the East river ami on the west by the Uowory and Fourth avenue , with nn ad. ditlon of n few swarming acres extending thnnco between Houston mid Canal strcuts to Uroadway. it embraces scarcely one- twcnty-lifth of the whole city's nrca , but it furnishes "homes" for ncarjy ono-qunrter of the city's population , and incidentally pro vides 10,000 yearly of the city's ' 40,000 deaths. An oillcini also credits U with supplying the raw material for SO percent of Gotham's criminals. FRIEND" . . is n Bcientiflcnlly prepared Liniment and harmless ; every ingredient is of recognized viiluo niul in constant use by the medical profession. It short- ins Labor , Lessens Pain , Diminishes Danger to life of Mother and Child. Book ' -To Mothers" mailed t'rco , con taining valuable information and voluntary testimonials. Sent I > y express , charges prcpnlil , on receipt of price , $1.50 per bottle. BRADFIEtD REGULATOR CO. , Atlanta , Ga. Sold by all druggists. AND sUKIiH'AI , DISriONNAKY. Cllll Ulllltlllll IY O. IffmmiinKiB'joJ In the Ireuununt or all Chronic , Prlvato null Nervous DisoiisDH. VYrito < i consult pjrsnimlly. TUB vr.ti UN r uv MA.tr/ , Aililre.Hs with Htaini ) . for | ur- tlciilam , whluli will ' " > Hunt In plain unvuloiu. 1 * . O 110X051. Olllou IU S IStli mroei , Oni'iliii , NJ'J , HOME INDUSTRIES AWNINGS. I COMl'ANV. Klnua , n.'iiiiinuol , nil n nil rubber uiolUIn ? . ( onil forciiuloiiiu. UU Kuril urn u BREWERS , Fred Krug Brewing lOmahaBnfllQjAm CO.Ml'ANV. Our botlluit Cabinet ( limrantool to oquil Ix'cr dollvoruil lu nnr outililubraniH. Vlunai Jart of tbu city. I'M ' axpiirtJ UuitlJ.I buor ila- acki un U IRON WOUK3. Paxton & Ylerllnj InJiislrhl Irn Worn IltONVOH1CS. . Mniiafnstiirlnx na1 ti \VroiiKhl uml oJ l Iron palrlntc of nil Kindt ot nullilliiK work , imiclilnonr. Ill H. Uu bru * Murk vtu. U Telojihouo HU. OWcolnifi "v Mill , 13IJ N , ISll".V.N PRINTING. I SOAP. Reed Job Printing Page Soap Co , COUl'ANV. ll uiifiplunir o ( ( Jalua il Ueu JJulldta . Ill * uup. lllckuryiL lit Of