........v... ........_ ., .,......................,. ....,_.,,.,....-..-..-........... . r 10 illuilblghlls rename, - Reception ere." Foreign Artist by the ‘replace. Club. [from the New York ‘llfortdsl 4 mllmtozgn ruddy, dirty little fellow: were going down Cortltudt street the other diy, boy fashion, arm in arm, with a peculiar slr about them the: excited popular curiosity not it little. Their clothes were as rsgzod It gnybodyh, and, indeed, et it rest view rather distinguished in that respect, and 70% “J9! held their noses up quite graodly. and were followed by whispers from the other little tel- lomln the street, who walked behind at e. " distance wlthan ‘apparent undefined Ioellpg of reverence and respect. - “Whst’I up!” said the writer to one of these humhlor persons after being somewhat _ eoldlyrepulsod by thoslx tittrsiotions. ' . “Wb tint’ ' Jim Barnet of ' the are p,,g¢....z.§mr. yilm know-—aln’t'ha jest! BK anttberost is goin’ — ter the terry-bos.t ter meet I bone row are, one.of them ‘iris vvhst plays on the violent. Teplcker, Oiu is goln’, tar give her ahlow-out tor-night. Ain.’t you ht-srdot l”, ' ‘ . ~ .v .. ~ __ -‘ H ”e it, is-it?‘ Who the other gen- tlemen . . — . .. . cw it " e e or, “Th hi hi Well-that but i’ ll him with lhesged-hair‘ nextio Jin—.ili_n is the‘ tail ,_ _'onr.~—-be’r.s.s.etor,>too:., does ther-cl . some-< ilyneg ’n’.’!_1kOl tnon etthsrdoor. ' _ ~bisnamc‘.:'~ Smother. it’! been in town tor two months. 8he’ll-be beck, she-will, store ‘lanes and ‘Jim wcwtsilngon no more '0 that style than, bet your _ehirt. ' But, he s p on "the committee bekez he )tln~meLc a. bull rpeeeh. The teller with their big s lltlnkh »; _ . , ‘£3";."i.*t't‘l.:.'itl‘..”li..’:t?;.’:2‘€i‘..i.:3‘2.i‘:. them two it ‘artists-ther one with his but kinder huh forwrtrd bake: he'll get A black eye a-tight n’; be’: it noospsper genvmsn now—hc was a shine. ‘We v_e ta gpeekln ’quaintano_e, him an ;m_e, in he’: retty rlearti -lop. he is; dont sell no luv it n ps- ra. or little bit oi a’!eiler_erith_ ther esp, e'ss!in'oz s iout-n’iis' too.- lie carries roun’ paper-_s for another msnond gets it big , snlu-3.‘ thnli. s how he got« into the club.- ‘I‘hey._. hs.in.Uo is elusive as theyetartecl out. - Pm-goin’ to thehiow-out myse I, an xoln’ icilne '11: next mantis. I -shines in choos- l?‘P"-1'o }'¢t'knovv._ _ ,- - . ~'Y_ouwiuti.’ ~ _ -- . "X ehlnes.-_ , tern’. boots, qyer. know. '.£hst.’a ‘bottom: some of ’ont. ‘ hey dicta’: ‘set out-for to take lnlany shines, but they got heaps now. Them two artist tellers never did no better work -thus me, only thoyvdld at the Fit’ at/‘cue and t in for thor ’cioty pol- ish. You Jet‘-~-welt t it Ohris’mas n_.n’ see it I slot as good a artist as they be. "Let. me see If I have so the names 1-ifght. Actors: Jsmes Barnet and James--whet .5? “Jim \’Vhlte, thcr one that kin jest mske e ' l s . “Jotmtall-to-I" _ ._ ~~ ~ “Barney Cohen in’ llttlereg Keiono.” at .P,, syn . “.‘ZPeg.’ Vmesns. ‘Llmpy,’ yer know. B'name's_1’st, of; "3 what. yer Inn!»-Shy --wbat‘beyouier1”- ;- . . , - . “wait it momctit, please. Bernard Cohen n::ti.Pstrlck'1ialone; now. .¢irriu.s—-P “l'.ong-taiied teIler—Siopsy Bsrltor~—’ ’S‘moll:er calls him Sam is. Feller with his handkerchief out-—that e Sorubb Welsh- “1&‘.f;er woz fer to bolutcrduced, vpose yer (1 want tor cal him Dave. Got em down? ’1'er a reporter, sin’: yer-what pafierfl _ . owns looitingmp curiously. with black be-sdy little eyes, into us ‘race, re 1 finished the entries, in m noto- ook ' end I were little enrbornaer . Blx or eight more of the ehrowd little "fellow: -hadcome up: gwhlio I wosterriilng, and they are so very ehreyvd and irreeponoible folk.’ Ind so ‘given in chttil’, and so utterly turn to triumph over enybody with: _vvhom the come into collisions: a-street cor-‘- nary es ‘ally it theydetocl. that he is slow of wltsn not used‘_ to society ‘that my mind mlegnvezme whether or not 1 not enough. But.cn'rioslt ,drove.me-on. . 4 . .- "Yu 0; acid; “Pm. from the-World.” liy blhck-eyed interment stsrted oil‘ on .s run a.fter,the committee oteix. who had dis- tanced uuvhlte I hut stopped to write, end tboutrd to me to _"‘Come on.”- - -- - - . "I my Jlm,i7. he ventured - boldly and bnitbleula. as we camozupto ether. and ,tho lnliut y turned around .,wi displeas- ure in his face. ’ “’Eicuse ‘me for hot crin’ oui'ycr‘1uimc. yer know, but.[ wsni: ter‘ tu- terduce toycr-this genvmnn, who is a rep-. ~ .ers}eniit'e o_f.tho ll_'orId. I _A ‘repel-'ier.,. ver 'ncw,"' he nddcdl, in A stage whisper. “Mit- ter "ii arid this is,.2:(r: Jim Barnct, of ther Grsn’ ‘Duke Thesytre.” ‘ ’ We bowed, and hiiator Jim Bsrnet said: “Yer h1.Jn’t ought fer to - ruuorffor me in‘ thertrcgix, lobby when I'm n com mittee. Wbycouidnn yer have walked this gonvmnn l£ii.‘.‘»“.".’..1‘°"L.":’..‘.’3$." ‘2‘~i",.'iI”.’§'.’fi§’ .2 toxgit yencl t is way you'll wait it long timo for or Tsploker." - ‘ '1”. go, ttignln ‘from the absshed Bobhyto "'?«‘sl§,‘§= '.§'..‘..‘."l‘-.“.'.';‘t.‘.‘3.“.“' i‘l‘..’;...., no. state. Bog yer pardln, sir; my thoughts was n-watldciln' to my IK|D0‘tl.0I‘[Il psrlore. Kin I, ggcyfape; so dhin’ to drink. {F ’so say but ‘I léeaiing ;l'i‘lF‘I:OkJE‘lf atigmlrollpn I declelluod o r * ’ r in I. ace (1 iueifio‘, role; somnwhatrtrfaitg dliznita .9315, ;:::2::t.‘i°.t‘:r::::::v.°.%.:2: W‘ *°°- “° "Of course," he continued,‘ “it vvouldn’t ebcen the prorper‘ thing tar you’n us to of known ’ch 'uther.'utll_ we hed ba=t'lntcrro- dot-ed”——elludln politely to the repulse I badtsustnlnod n w moments before-“but how that we kin meet as gcut’man and gent’- ‘mueaniptlonrter slr (throwing l¢x>1];cr‘sxhl:tar;{s.s 2:: c in again on - tr name arlt, ot noifspaf even". oft ’ sum‘ ’=.‘3'.:‘»‘§°...'l'.?.$'l%‘*.‘lll..y.."l.’.t‘.liv5’."‘???‘." _ ' At this hint I produced no ~not.e-book and‘ vitoe"isnt down on" the.etoo_p o I vacant ware- “: A ._. _ ‘*ln’poee ?.’ weht .on‘..thet'metnherof the committee, ittxur Jim White, use been .'re'-‘ °°N,ln¢nd°<‘1;l0 me we I-f‘.,‘_lsoliy.epeskerz’.’. "that you went for ._ter knovtwhat we Arc in com.-mittce ‘ on. The ’1‘sploh;r club, air. was . founded ..fer_ter wait -at - the errybonts until- ql-still lshed-.str~_rangen.tun-nmatarlands llgwll -t 330,: 5 . -,Wo. takes, .’em by. I exist: nndleede em.tconr.rooms.in Riv-* .bei*ore cm-‘—'elr‘.’ But we . ghlxflngnlong too lee'i’_—‘—tl-r. ~ Wenur:ro,un’n - ens vvithgoon--with congenial vplrrots. we shows ’em 2111!‘ this iere gr.-rpa¢,cll.y'of'Ney_- * eon»-ori\n_.wiltiy-_ shcws,._’em its gr.-re_sthesr- _ _ .. m-.—1__!o t-—.oht»w_e. Vterthervprinoevt t1ook’ti ter, '1 ,soogs,.: it 1‘ol'.thot';i:u.Itot'l"n mistlses artwe ‘ave akln’l .’preelstion’n a ’my Wei-come-sir. _‘I say", ongh, they ain't no good my talkln’ this now '1! yer comic’ to lgchfnegtive bggti’; rollers, thst_boet’ii be in sows seven ;went. down iethe ion.‘ and gottherc list as tho,1lne newsi e-wheeler, ‘Jersey ty’? swung into her dock. -Pretty soon, so the crowd came pouring out, Kr. Ilsrney Cohen darted into it, and reappeared leading ioward.uv- the - ilttlchbone voyage" we were expecting. bhe vvursther pretty with large deep e cs. Ker form was mounted and almos we ed in a hasty brown and grccndshavvl lgihe weather being‘ cold), which telrg] herfi oaeahood, and id her com- p e dy. er little feet, however. were ex. pose , end twlnltled modosti through her show. Blister Cohen had po [tel offered to rel evcher of her violin. but she c aspod it in its green on? tightly to her breast. I thought she was A ii in scared as s e was led wwmy our group. hsvlng evident y not enomnm-ea ourecustome before, but the cause. at any flit‘, without , 'romonni.rsnce, gracefully enough. ._ 1 do not know why, but I was quite overlooked in the introductions that followed . I think thti guest would glstil have spoken to me for tile iooked'st mo-wl hsitlnd. eup- pllce ng air, but hllstorfcohen Whispered to her end then naked me if i would not f‘vulk with Mi-tor lilfoieh to their horse- nrn, ho’d be ’appy to give‘-me any internat- lion.” (Mister hen-vliem sorry‘ to sly, like hlsfrlz-ed siist_er~;;ivi:i:a,,por.im "roost unrcnaonsbly in droppingdxis - 'n’s,” even whey-no raver do, __ rnarlziseonversstlon.) Deprirr the: ot a , right to irnovv the name! oflhr guest, tvss__eompeill-,d to be content at getting it second-hand from the Flat: avenue mm as Jullsna Ft:l'fc.' (ilugil lngtonpisee-clr.. -We putts--food and drink , does [.1 _-snotherdoughnul. inihcr month. an mt-;-",dr-..1. W9 thou-s.'.em iher one tiomethlng; I uuppasb. I co l_d int make out Iiil accent. -Recalled her " ttin" foruhort.- Jrilmr ‘vi bite even vuggetted that, av‘-'f_ prob- ably would like to get any dinner befo "grog Irptown. and the speeches at the r ptlzto wool: is:l. begin for three hours. -l.t._'_ hips viouidn t be expected of me to rlde~‘tx.‘J§.‘iu slur , . , _ _ »"~ A‘: . . » him’:- 17? horse car. "so I s‘posc we'lls:;' '3"iiIVma be concluded, es we turned Into Park roar; "I: e son at the ‘blow-out." "iiiissm aiciitoum," i said. am! left him rather abruptly. 1 suppose he didn't under- stand it. ' . They had done dinner, about. when I got uplo Itirin Ion Place. It. seems the PIN‘ ms change in the lirst few minutes of con- vacrsailon withthelrgucst at the plan ‘I-10 intention hsd been-to lint welcome her and then it-rd her-s stand-up attslr-"And this.“ said hit‘. Barrie Cohen 10 the Elm“. ;1'iswhs't’wearesgoin to do ‘lose yer too tm . “ Ige,"rnlti the, with I‘ lrlt. Ind thst ecilled it. They had their red tint. She was lingering rev the Inger-bread nuts- whenl got to, atndthey ht ‘root out tera pail of beer stlhe expense of the l’roeltleot,'o1r triend, hllater Jim liarnet. The roonrvwt a peiteet truth. It was notovex-large no way, and everrbod knows how ltis in Riv ngteo 't3:ce~sny;h gwilldrswr témzii Qtfmirdleflu . erecept on-room, or gene -e am was on the acooodlioor. The outer v door ,dldn‘t lockntndihe-hallway sud stairs-were inst full-oi impertinences. -Iment up by violence and survived, I pr_et-nine, by fitness."- , ey bed the rconvdcoorsted tor the ocea- sion with cuttings otpleturee from the illus- trstrd smile a colored mottocs restl- ln; '.- '11- lxonlex olish,” "The Daily -1\‘ett'eh lsrgeroirculstien than-anv other ‘evening published in New York." "Silos lumen,” with similar secular » eenumentl, and one text of erellglons cost ;"For what we are about toreceive. the inr make us trol lh8IiKftll..’? ‘ The guest was at one end of t etebie, end on the wall abovo her head was adesign in evergreens, l lilalll.” in very large -letters. Beneath this was the word “Music.” drawn with a thumb dipped in mauve lot: on a sheet or wbiv.ey-bromrps.- per,» and tacked up-a.p°t-unset provision, which‘ indicated that his r one had been hailed before. sod'miyht' be again. Below this was their-gend, “Spit In the apittoonr, ” which. except sour as in hell beendlsregatrdv ed completed the decorations ot the wells. ii. dial .1 an had it » cor mu evstsn eg. eppsrcn y been oeubliehrtl between hosts and guest, and,‘ to give the latter countenance, some tour or five of the gentler. sex had been in- let), whose bare , Arms and shoulders learned. wizenly under the kerosene. or club propel-= sat on chairs, and those -who surrounded‘ them and were occasionally ministereddo by the transistor '-surreptitious tloughnute, were in their novi- ineliglbie either 1 the club or by themselves, tndtcvthom. for the more ixnfoslng-e.sle- bration of this joyful occasion, the tens era entree of the rooms bed ,b'_een scourge " kind otsoda-cocrtailprivllcgc; all the but nogln. . . “They tallies a dry above,” said Euler White, explslnlng to rue_ their li.I!1dllr;f'}“ “d’ycr vvarnt n. doughnut? Ketch ’oid. It was 3. rather die tioughnut,s.nd I de- cided to say, “No; . bud had in dinner.” At which he looked gratified, an no it-.’ul1u- self.‘ The beer came in in its poll. Borne vvu poured in at tumbler tor. thegucet, who s‘l§ped'and puttered with it as it she dldn’t l o it, and smiled srnlebly when her butt nei hbor, Minter Bsrnet. lint kiasingt e rim of t e tumbler with devotion, swallowing: its contents at it draught. ‘ The other glass was t in circulation, and all having drank thenpu . the health offlinglisna, too‘ all who passed out to the novices and item lately npset.: Mister Barrie * President of the club; then Itoodup nndeml ed stthe cat who stood up too so that her heed was net above the edge of tlwubio. Ker violin, which bed leln it her tsp, aha ‘pressed to her boeout agsiuwith the left him , while her right not Isy pro- leetingiy around quite a heap of -gingerbread snd.csn_¢_iy that-bed been altered tit hershrlne. "Mira Julie ” sold the President, "the ‘he ioker Club is now ngoln’ tor receive. ‘Po be yer feed"ny’o got I. [use tor take away in yer hsnd,.’n’ we .orl- Dcsyer satisfied. ‘P’rsps.y’ncver was received belnre. "l.‘woo’t hurt yer not a bit-9" hesr me? 1-[later Whlhn here, who is a -bully epcsker, will melee in speech tor yer about their club, '11 then ’f y’ vrernter yer o’n make another is any the glue- gerbresd woe good, is‘ else we'li'talte it out in moo-ie on the vvleleen- Bee?” . Kiss (iiuglisne put s dou hunt in herinouti: and smiled. "Becca gong," said she, with n.be.w.iu:hlng smile. ‘- - - ‘ ‘But yer orter waited,” put in lilster Iteg -Malone. “Y' c‘n speak when Jim gets done, M-,°“,).~vs , _ . - l . - Phou teat cheese it, Peg. Iisint yerygot no manners!» Jim White, are y’ aver gold to receive this fiucatl” . ~ -< Mister W Ito Jdvnuocd hurriodl to the gout’: usd of -.the table, and‘ she rew her .arm closer around the gingerbread. * ‘ Yer don’t think 1. warn’: yer old doughnuts l” ' said. he contetnptuously. "llfhy, I'm a gain’ lerlmltea speech t’ynr. Now. Jatltiier World, here we goon‘ Berry y’ couldn'tent is dou hunt. We'll ‘are some bcerariterweget one, you ’n' me. ‘You'll ’sve to stand up, 1 s’ e. ” The cuupsny store at me rather rudely I thought as I came forward. locked up in in face with her pretty oyoa,s:ld I guesst-res go rig to speak to me. At any meet from lserbosrtl, an ball extended it, but blister Iinrnct slapped her. ‘ ‘ He '1 it re- KSOIYEX." said he. hon hilainr White began e sfaech. ,. it ‘to Tspioker Club, miss. was founded ter wait at the ferry-bun’. ’ntil de-eiiugulshed air-rangers iurrum afarlandton these shores, vlnll-I. We take: ’cm by the ’and and leads ’em~'.to c,u.r.rooms, rules. We put food and drink before ’cm, mun, as on ‘ave seen your- self. But that stint ell. ‘v'c eur-roun’s ’e_m with eon-genial splrruts. We shows ’em that ther princes ’t inteleck ’n queens of songs ’n the mlsiisee ’I Art is ’px-eclsted by us, miss- that our g-real. city slut sll r. tvlldy nus of--o hon can ’n’ ’pllce'n’.oartmcn-’n old women with ap‘ple_-stands. We takes {em beneath the 8tlI‘~ ace miss, '11‘ shows ’ern wot we be ourselves. ‘You. might notot thought they was _any sur.h- it club.’ locket them walls. Iart. to nooepape _ ‘ts incur humble ways devoted-—:iewoted that way. Music In sister art. We are glut to hire you‘ come and brine, your wioiecn. ’h‘ you lain msitcupcecb will be gisd torterhcar - t; ’n'..l think lt.ie,tvot yer orter do. "gnu donft like, then lustpgivo as e. song on yer Yvvioieen.” .. - j _ ltir‘. White . down‘ upld noisy cheers and appls'ut‘e,. at _ hluh the guest started and surcd_,’an_d Ifretidenl. llsrnet said, with dig- nity. . . , 9-.hiltrJule, y’v ben reoe’lt'ed. F ’d like vlotellus how yer like it yer kin ’n ot erwlae .1’-if,-’*n1uno-1' . . « - - ' 8 edit! not secmto understand but put A to _ hershsrvi. eel :llh rceptton . that the‘ services were con- lloncst, now.‘ But This room is dolvotod to convey the root beneath I dim Aeome's'_ocrn hole .a, real “~““‘l‘."",i..'-'*"*.i...“.i'*'é.‘.. "2333 “°".°‘ . er I: . e on o. n lay somethin".'I.c.{'_ .’ ; .-‘ ins was resii y scared. «I think, by his tone. he else d her fiddle tighter to her brsnst ‘caught 11 e large pieces of finger- bresd in theeiher hand, .and,,e:ter oo _lng_ xxrtlltxed It the M.‘ M I mmenl. been to '03- .. : .~ . . . "Cry-baby I" scrcamedthe other fourglrls with one shrill voice, and. among the novices somebody, raised aplufui, prolonged howl. at "*.*%°é.:*=° *.i.".'°*=‘.':°;“l."*:i=.l‘.t.**‘;»“*'... . one I row a on res _who_pro rly enough had taken. the guts; ’un'der h epoclai protection. ,' ‘This ’crc .eiuh_ had better come t’ order. Alntr or no l€Bl8,hlll0V;l'r7 1Ahln§.’);‘e‘r nolm:§.hhe:sLAl‘kt yo: _ no not n o es t lsdies. , Jest‘ any one ‘fyyer lntvon to :p!e1g §;é5:_';: ;,l‘,":l.lll”n I'll slsp’m t’yer, I don't This brat) _ hi. the nssexnblsge toe resilzing sense of its utlen. end alters special threat gt Mister Pe hinltzlne with his fiat, Blister Ilnol. turn to t o guest whoh dbo tltilizslng herfiltllc white llhltlifllla whllfie alto“: 7.’.2‘.§.‘.1’l.i8.;°"”. “f”? “f "‘°.l"i.’.‘.“"‘li“‘i'. i‘'‘‘’ on cc [1 to e on 0 e I her piretzy eyes, now wnshod witg tears. n 0 " ls: ulle, ’ said he. gently, "wet are you a-cryln‘ for?” he ouster but is sob, and another dlzoi the dingv list at her eyes. "Alut yer 'ad enough t’ est?" 0 8 ill. "Aiot yer ‘ed yer beer? Y’ didn't drink it, yer know‘ yer could of.” More st. 3. . Mr." liarnem patience be an to give way, and indeed the guest secure to me to be mom sully than there was any occasion for. ' ‘om. found her blubbcrin',_" said he to me, Aside. "Gigs mo yer handkerchief a minute, will yer. « u"(gsn': ypsslgethhfiigier,‘Y?!sh’s,'!: I; vr rs on on e e u m an - cbletl” But I had to. ‘for he said? at. “What! 8crubbE’e That slot no-hsnb chit-i" lhal‘d"ie s in. Band ’or out, will - l’ ' . . . . “go he actually tool: it and wiped the guest‘: superiorpcrson. tlste-’-e. bodyof cunggvntlemeu considered‘ You look at me.‘ hit-is Glugiisnir rate, also removed her rl ht band for_e—xno-- rn in? to the stage. All orus. But ’f. elude .’ Minter Pix iitsdoueobeerved her with- ., _..._.,....,,. Ennis fileisr-" 2me'zrtzi¢~-Snggiemzrzlal. §hz2i. oxen and cheek: and other teatoroelibartll ; int he gave it bsclr directly. "Now. ‘hi sx Julie.” be “id, “i don’: see nothlu’ to cry about. The 'l‘a Iokttt’ Club has led yer and hetrrd yer, It-i rustle yer I. bully ltpttndh. ’n it)’ has it rlxhlto expeck tb:tty’il’pl-ly ’em mc'snoovlc.” _ it was to 4:. Either she didn‘i.under,- stand or wou dn’t pisy. endtm-nevi snumi as it to gololhe door. But Mister Pet: tia- lonc we» in the we . “No yet don't." M-id he, rprenrlins: out is arms. The novices be- rim to shuttle their boots, and one made it cut- rsii under his breath. The girl: migrated unanimously, and mode faces 1-’. thorn. I hate is raw, and bcnevolcnily oiferod to try her with iialiao. Said I: “Iliro nit ohc us it tghi. donulclns mls. Che re lra lit to. so slcioi Ilirsstl molte fgso I-‘plSt‘§\'0l9-diI'll.lIl chn o’hailusttltato- rssi.--—- _ ' into rd because it didn't seem to have the iig reflect, and my vocabulary began to weaken besides. .Poor' little creatures. these itrlieo artists who haven't learned Qngillsh and have forgotten their own tongue.‘ his one only lined up her voice and went the louder. Mr. Bartlet’: taco sssumed a danger loom. "3Il$tI Julie," Mild be. taking or y the arm. ‘ 'ti'yer see that crowd of tellers?” Point log to the novices whose dentonitrstlonr led been-renewed when the etupefyio elfeot of my Italian poised cit). "I'hetn fe lets is int settle’ to git at yer. i-"yer don't matte no s eh nor play no tune i can't kce9’m on yer n I do’ r:o's I warnler.” Sheltstrly howled you know: and st this the crowd came at her over-the tetbles sil- meu. - Theyiald hold of her skirts noel. dad the spell of doughnuts and gin erhreed dis- covcu‘d'Ir‘y av! nroue-search. he _ ’ st her-lid is, w tell she stuck to o etinately, however: they hurled horrible mockery at her, not of the moat deliosto sort. Idtdn’t -ecu Inybody hit her, but she was sitting onion tloorwith her ilddlo between her ltnecs. hool- lng, and with arlngcf howling young demons around heryvvhen a ponderous step came up the steirsjtmd a very big woman, with an an- gry face, come 1:1. ’I that P" halted I anxieusnottoioseanypolnts. Imiuqueezed inter. corner with one of the lady-guests, who had made it i csptgrn oi‘ gingerbread- crumb sud.vrs.se oking steel! with it. . won, my i” she I luitercd, end had s.ulm-- mediate dt of com; ing. somebody culled mv arm. I looked around, and it was Bobby. "\'ou’n me better go," he sold "I‘hu.'s Minis hiosce. Won 5 she clear us-outi” ‘lhe dill..It seemed she let the club have the room one evening nweeit, on condition that the would be out of it before 9 o'clock "wouldn't kick up no row." It was 9:310, and the row had been-tremendous. "one said not A word but went. straight‘ to her yvork,” taking ubmen, novices sud nests ' two by two end dioxin them throng the o n tloorbehlnd horw us one will swtui p o'y‘oi' her arms. and no they went hurling down the narrow stairs, the crowd of lesion below saluted them with core and discordant laughter. _ some to it c by horas the cleared herself e space. preferred slrstsgem, and, picking up Mrs. Glttglian: In myvnrm-, xotto thewlndow. which to bed. I run petting?‘ her end rounding a had been hnrt,w on hiitsls one got nenrenou h to see us, and that and my twenty-tire-do overcoat saved me. _"ls id lllcdl" she said with it heavy vcice.iu-er eh I detected the fear of the Car- oner. ' . - ''No,’’ I said cheerfully. “all rilyht, I v ucs|:.l'll take her out -into the air; ' and, s ‘e actually showed .me I back wily into enclhsr street. 1 set Min tliogllana-dovrn on iihe sldcvvsik end we her" ‘la pen-ny" at her lmmedlate andsc - sscd thou h 1-other whining request. beta I asked or re she was going, and she said in broken American that t was none of my business or words to -thst eflect. end so we parted. . 'i'ho Tapioca- Club, Mr. Bernet into:-med me, as I met him in Itivlngton.stroet,- it few -months utter, will look out for new rooms tit once, and continue its weekly receptions winter. summer, undrrnuclroumetsnces. . ‘ 2 “But why is it called the Tapioca Club?" I asked of Do by'.who greeted me with acclaim: ll we root 1 moment after. . "Id ed hnr.”.he‘chucklod, full of his escape. . '£Iovr’d you git out. Tsolokerr Wei , thst’a nsecret which nobcd kin utt- d’au._nd till he lines-1 do’ no myee t.” Who invented the Telegraph? The following letter appease in the London Nears of October 31: . . $111: In I well-doecn'ed. tribute to the memory ottbe isle Sir Charles Whest.atone,ln our paper of vcstorday you key: "In Amer- ce it is common loci in ‘for the late Prof. liorre the prlorii of discovery as regards the practical appllcet on of electricity to the work of the telegraph." The questlonwhst coun- try may justly clnim the honor of having been the "are: to produce the electric telcgra h is one of rent and general interest, and l is quite t the that that honor is claimed for En- lsnd. in the tnrlogof l8t:J,egrent ublic an net in New York. at which the rltisli Min tier. Illr. Thornton, was proton‘, was given to Prof. Morse, who, in his speech on that occasion, maintained this claim of prior- it for America against En land on thegronod o snvlnrcntlon by himself is N333, which date be contrasted with that at 1867, _tvhenJfcsirs. Cooke and Whuistone took outthelr drat English stout for an electric telegrnpu. It is pro bly e fact, us you any’, i t i-Whcaistone know nothing of Horse s the- orlta and experiments when he was striving to obtain the attention of the clvlllzul worl to his own.’ ’ but in a controversy which turns upon dates, I would call attention to the fact. that so for bscic as 1823 .a> pamphlet was published in this country under the title ct "Description of an Electric Telegraph, and of some other Electrical Appzarsttts, by. lfrsncis lionalde,” "printed for . Ilunter, ho. 7:! St. Penis Church-yard. 1323." this work Mrcltonslds fully describes his in- vention with illustrative d , and fore- tells in a striking 1n1.n'l.¢l'_80l:llO of the public llc uses to which it mi ht‘ be _.applled. ;“Wl.ly,’.’ be alive “thou d not -our kings’ Jtold councils at lirigmon win. their Min-' isters in Londont_” “Wh -should. our de- faullent escaping by, detail: of our 3 _ climatnt”. " tue have oieettlosl can er- razimtc oilloes.‘ oommuni - with eech ‘other ‘ell over the ltin in, l . we con.” 3‘ ‘Give me materiel noon ,and I will ele nu-lty. the world?’ "'1'!!! ter is’ co‘ described " in 1823 hid been In foot oonsti-_uoled' by Hr. Renaldo so far back an‘ 1816, in whl-ehyonr he otter-ed it to thothonflovernment, receiving an otllclal rep? to the effect th1t<‘!t.ole- gtnphe of any" ind are now whol1y_uunoces- envy sud no ether~thsn't.be one new inure’ wt! in adopted"--dated 'PAdmiralty'0dlce, _i8llJ."' 'I'he'o nal‘iet.t.er' IVTKW-€§‘b] Kr. (afterward Sir» ohn) Barrow‘. Secretary to‘- the Admiralty, is in my peueuion. In 1870 Mr.-ltonalds received thcbeoor-of knight.-. hood forhis "curl and remarkable lnborrln tele phio luv clone." \ "end on which I havextvonimsy tend to not-'_ ’ _tie’tbe question of.prlortty'=betw.een Eogia.nd_ -_ iand Amerlcavwlth regard to- the el ‘rapt: yottvwili,-I hope,-be .sblo to find epaoe? or his communication. 2 - - - . j_ I am, sir, your obedient servant, . ‘ ' ‘ :v “ - Bsxunr. outrun. Kenilvvorth, Oofiabcr w. A -_ “' A Bed Romance in Real. Life. , . (FromlhelhasufG:l.)0oarlee.] _ Jesse Bpenoer is one of our colored citizens.- Born in slavery, he wits, through the kind- ness of his master, manumlttod at » the Age of twenty-one. But J use married 3 sieve girl, end-herewu the source of his trouble. Three. children were-born of thiomsrrlego atndthe condition of the children tnllewin that of the mother,t.hoywere_heid.uIinves.‘ esseworted an purchased the freedom of the eldest, and bsrgnined tor the freedom of the other two end his wife. The sum demanded ($1 500) looked like a mountain of mom}! to poor fosse, and he turned his gyesato Col on A with the stone hope.of sud on wealth which in! lured to many hither. Jesse crossed the tales in me, and the year following rccelv s letter from his wife stating that she had escaped from the houbo of bondage, and with her two youngest children had reached that haven of the colored race. the Canndas. Shortly nitnr receiving the letter J eese’e estate with its con- tents were destroyed b tire, and the address from whic it we: wr tlen in Cansda lost. Nor from Lint dsy to this ha Jesse been able to find it clcw to the whereabouts of his wife or children: . No Pull-backs Need Apply. Mr. T.’1‘. Collin, of Dutch Yiat. cit..-rm. _ "A female woman ' for a houiekeeper. lie ‘offers A good home, easy work,‘ liberal wages and s pros act of promotion. 1 "No pinned- bsclr beam as nor beauties from Brooklyn "need apply." . ' , IN the line of "How to Brin lip Events”. is the speech of the Jiltlo ny whoaud, "Father, I think you should give up swear- -pelsgo. -Benedict so his bride _ ying th cavilmerritxe, . _ , ‘binding. Itlsmstter oi tute.- :1 ‘the tllairictsthe schools atuched in ‘thing or crushing t logo t il ." Th be lzu ....:.::: .?’.”.¥.:'.l.l.'.‘. ° "°°°8°° =: ma enters elmsueur..” i‘mt-eedir gs of the rivet Parliament in" the Islands. ' i-znact mrnt o£.importa.ot !.mva-Schools 1'aatomco.it'ntui Travolta lfacltltiei-- {tho Roy2.i.l.¢!ruiy--itlinva Recognizes Shanon. . ' _ , Jrrme ibebasl. Tnocineo chronicled The isteitssmosu dates are up to the sin of November. Thtbflxh prirato correspondence and other sourceethe Chronicle is enabled to lay before its readers a. more interesting re- uzme in dam! of ttitalrs in the newly dodged Kingdom of Samoa than has yet appeared. There is no doubt that America: ascendancy it full end complete In the Samoan Archi- Whethcr fol-good or evil, General Grant and llreniiersteieberger, the Latter the cc-equsi of the King of Samoa, have esot- pleteiy euehred the English and the Germans in the game which has been on the boards for who years past, the etske being all the its-_ most. ostensibly Samoa is an independent nsLlon,_butthe bristling American; catnnou end firearms, the Axnericin .I'remier and Ameri- can mbtsnis,tne constitution seals-rs of the kingdom dntfted by an American. sad to American virtually. on the throne, all go to prove thetlho Eagle is at blgagtd saucy bird down in Samoa. This festive state of, thing: nuy well satisfy our nstloosl vanity without any attempt tdfurther lnllstc it bfthe sequi- sltion of live or six of the greet States of Xorthern Mexico. A: to having an Atn_erlesu on the Samoan throne, why that’: siinplya “Yankee notice," an eccentricity for which the followers of the Bird of Liberty are noted. ,‘rl‘o have Americas Generals doing imperial service in , Chins nod Japan. The philosophy 0 this policyuts that we dieohlrge Amcricsnidess from the mouths of cannon and titles. The barbarians and the heathen: —do not undcrstsnd any other kind of Amer-' .c:n tn-ntnryjust now. A rim is not: bad spelling book, for it commencement in some cases. Hence with: regard to Same: the Sprih field ride will be to lowed by “life- Gutl'ey’e er." Bo without induiglegln spleen as has been common I¢1i|mii.lhe$&~ fll0rlfl ’rexnier,=we shall see what he hes done so or. ' . In ecoordsoec with the provisions of the new Constitution thessmoan Parliament was in session at. Apls, the capital 0! the king- dom. The Pulls ment consists of two Iioutes, the House of Nobles and the Home of Com- mons. The former is mlled the “'l‘imon" and the letter the “h‘aimus.." Combined the body is called the "'t‘amne," ester as we do decipher’ the vernacular. The [louse of h'obies,ls elected b and from the leading chiefs ot all the la ends, and hassevcnteen members. The House or Commons has e bteenmemben—'onet.o every two thousand its ahltsnis, we believe. who are e y and from the district. chiefs. What the pop- ular I) Item of voting Is. it any we are notin- .fonncd.- The Nobles and the owners re- ceive no pay, it being contidered,_a high honor, an exalted of social distinction, to serve the kingdom free grails. The Samoan savages msntleetn lofty love ‘of the poo is end 5 tcodcr§ngard forltsx-payers w eh might well be omuisudhy iiery patriots and int cfiico-holdersin our midst. ‘-It may be in- ierestlng to auto than the royal satnosn legis- latorssppcsnd inlheoostumev of Cl: s- llensin their Snndt -no-to-meet oqclot es. and that I. rule of t. o Parliament impotent heavy due on any member of Lhorcyai body tragic trhoou its eensitivonoesbye pearlo in tberiavs-lsverig, namely. the thin and mega-st, breech-cloth usually were by the Beuth-Sea Ialtnder-I. Assndwich Island legislator It once a wit and philosopher, proposed a bill in the Iiswsilsn Parliament making It moral crime for my white man elected to that body to lpptsr in any other costume thanthe male, a piece of masculine resemhi ngtbo Bstzoan lav:-love. The anakasoion. deliv- ered I etirric oration denouncing the unity of the whites c nutter} of drones: tending to corrupt the primitive 1 can of the natives and leash them a useless extrsvsgnnoe. The St- mosns with‘ the feminine passion more siren ly developed. will have no “pull;-, black in their forward movement towards the fallen’ Dlradlsm. . All laws are enacted in the Samoan tongue, which has been declared the official inn up of the kingdom. The first. piece of ie is ation wee the Ihrbér law, which makes A e s. free -x:o‘r‘t exlilcrpt ink: sltfgle r.-e.epe‘c1t.x All l§5toxi- cao uors veo ye uyo or use 0?! oquo dozen bottire. The next was lt)he. License law, taxing all saloons $300 yearly. payable every matter. There were some twenty saloons all kind: at Apia before the formation at the new, Government, all of tvhlch.v.'ere'opcn day and night throughout the coil week, Sunday not excepted. Cen- rcqtient there.-zwui ngrcct deal of drunken- ness In immorality. Now there are only three t-stioons in tho pisco, which are com. pclled to close their door: at 10 o'clock every night and keep dosed entirely on Sundsys. A local ntttive police sees that the law is en- forced. At 10 o'clock at gun is tired. when all the natives must retire to their homes or huts. Any round roaming the streets after that hourarellsble to arrest. This surveil- lance, which it often a tyranny. is borrowed from the French system of governing the na- -tives ot'1‘s.hlii. . The enrolment of new marriage ‘laws his crested s. prototuul sensation throughout the kingdom. The)' touch the neuron on tender spots, as the saying is. Under these leave no native can get married before procuring illiclltxte from nsédixtrlot Judge, for which op can pays . twain oeubo uni alike!‘ I h This procured. the loving , ted In the holy .bond.t,by or minister of.the gosfizl, the 0 . otiiccr whatever genera 3 may s. t. - no 01‘ mete theio s of I , when the , men Cstho ed -musl..ha.ve their names spoken from the pulpit one woe ; revloug to proenr-. ing the _li end be A full com- munlon with Church»; The elvil~is_wh.a1.- nothing to dzrwith-this spocinl religions obit-.‘ elicit; the Oh lutoe drst. common ‘ owever,"bcforo,the civil outhnritieecsn net. 1 th k eoedin the tlnve v:h‘z?l:ux:..tight toxany .\s.gs.in,s1, 1 e’_ §.'i‘K.“3,- bridegroom, or why the age should no_t_ 1 K in . .111 it ntebef th czeleeglucficdolugtilazorizmfiyififuuvmhr: cg teem lobe diaheartened_by'_-thoee little? - A‘ the ‘am _‘pcdimenls which block the may road to bliss.‘- .u. ‘ui rs'al‘bellf'amoo um. s u. I‘eiAn]:lc!:sthat"it?is bcttergtoln ° Wan §’i'§?:.':’.i2“ "l.'?'°3§“’°“§‘;,.‘;‘i" ‘ ti”; . , I humanity. 'r e cI1lh|tn“t1lol‘Orn W °° -knew "the int ." Andthst lmeetsvt thfafsir share of A nssmos,. even under modern ,l pmven by A the many five-dollar p ecetjwhleh drop into‘ the nstionaltreaeo . Ityrnsa-master stroke otlegislation’ toe!‘ the ezcheqner in this we . . . . 'Ihe'Gevarnment has. decided lint every district musthsve its schools, though as at they are more in nuns than in fact. {he teachers are to be in the pa of the State and the tax for their support w ll be so much per . The various sects hsve oed foresch tchoisr their churches but the education being entirely ct s sectarian cher- actcr‘ it pro iogive thorn tree I more practical pend useful training. 9, to date there had been no conflict between Church and State on this question though the caul- dron is bolilng thetway. lteinbe records to bxvn got on the right side of the m uloners, a wise policy, as they are romoneiees against open sud avowed ‘cnemies.- The authorities have commenccd to build I road around the blend on which Apia is located.» The work is done by prison izbor, and it ‘has been date!- mined tilt! the criminal chases mun do 1]] this kind of walk. A postal law is also being ‘framed by which the natives of the different lslsnds can Futon mall once I week. It is the lnlentionto purchase n smsilnteainorln make weekly trips around the archipelago, as is the ‘core in Sandwich islands. The Same-in tiensuryle somewhat depleted. although the Premier and the royal lr shtonl dothelr wcrkasalaborofiove. no t tmatcrlai pro- gnu must go along slowly. . -Aluxe building in nstlvo style has been fitted upon a palace, where the laws of the kin cm are flnt. promulgated. The palsee of t erremler has also been completed, the natives taking great ride in putting on the iiniahln touches. ere Colonel Steinberzer letohe ound, bu u a bee ordering this I. st his will. He is sur- rounded by numerous Secretaries a.nd_trsns- istots, all engaged in arduous labor. Both the buildings mentioned are more temporary , Posters at Apis,_gleosrd ' unoed that elyn -structures-cenitrred tosvbst is to come. Al- ready pint!‘ an "specifications have been pre- rented for the building of it times at melte- ment. is palace for the King and mother for Premier Btciabcrgetm The progoseci struc- tures yclllbc built. or stone an brick, with rc-cioiis nlltive secede '89 may be required. hey still be finished and furnished in elegant style. It is to be hoped that the e:ael.lysdorn- me ni It will not oiorneily beggar the kingdom. as did the auction of 1 one “eiephrtnte” railed the Royal Ilmvtiisrt Hotel and the hinge Cepilolthe Hawaiian tin can. .‘%’othin; csn exceed the llberalily c that class or rmuizulsind white men who no engaged in the noble work of civillzlng the aitvaga, et- pecislly when the natives foot the non. ‘there all Szmoeu imn consist‘ yf 130 ml- diers. t e navy of a. tale sclrt called the 1’: erlese, the letter 8 present ran: the United States Government. A: Inuit so the natives are immensely happy in hciievln . The sol- dlerrs are tine looking fellows an drilled by awhiteman, hisior Latrobe, who promises to be the future Commtnder-in-Chief of the army and navy. Fmeen nstlves are taken from each district until the above quote is in burners (the open sir) when all are drilled together. Aseoon as xtiftcen are proli- dentin the manual of arms they, are sent beck toiltt-it districts to muster lo and drill the raw recruits. These latter as! bd 89-1196 the mllille. ot the tile etc, while the 180 is the standing army. '1‘ barbarian. like his civilized brother, takes to a gun as nstursll so be doeeto a meal of user tiah. ’Tha‘.'.'t there: things an be done in st kings’ manner Ills Mejceti his ietes use but agraa seal ex- ecuted tor in. it is about twice the circum- ference ot. a twenty-dolls: gold piece bor- dered with a crown on top. eurmoun by e cross, by the aide oi which tun. eoanttt mes rhhlic their stately branches. Below the cvovm is eetnevhio la the shape at s._ F :€I!II.lO!I’8 apron, wit a star representing tée islands, and 3 Bible 0 n. beneath the tier. Iusaer ntlne form low these are thevrords 0 an a logo 0 lost Malamu- lemma in me. in word is m lifter). Finally, within the bar or beneath a. t, e in- lbcd, “sisiieun I.” ‘rte notional ml is hi it-toned. It is the size of the‘Klng's . 'ithii:t the upper double border are the nntive word», Paloma no la moto o Samoa (the Parliament and people ct Ss- xooa). A-crown is beneath, surmounted by a cross, _v:hich‘ts Justbtzvvfifi s:lr:::‘:>srallel- o sin contain e 9 c , szgrosr an anohgr and s palm tree. 5:n:EH clause the pxrslielogrsm no two natives, figuratively spesking, one reboot to his nxltrdncee, except the love-lav!» Ilxnlfving the pan, end the other dressed in stuterioltn costume, an if delivering a stump speech, exgnlfyin the future. Below tbeeo, necr- peniine orut. is the Imiinvquotstlon omsfa ad def iortam (ailpraieelc ood). ‘rhea » urukl i§:hWiul‘E|LI¥'U ole elthlzr silde. intent is eror . are rare in n appearance endre uted to have immensely the nslive lacy. Our Notion, the Ameri- can people, have the reputation of being the greatest inventor: of thennge; and it must be p_ica-lull. tor us to contemplate that tonin- ventivo faculty in one of our fellow citizens hasso wonderfully developcdunderatropb sun. The Ilsvrailna Kingdom hes semi-odlelsliy announced the determination to recognise the Kingdom of semen. The last etcuuer touch- ing at Apls brought letters from me liaieety hslsksua to Premier btelnbe r, congratu- lsting him upon his success, guxntnteeing recognition of the kingdom over which he presided. when duly presented. By the re- iuroof the steamer to Honolulu the Eat-noon authorities dispatched the proper documents to the Hawaiian Government, asking "to be recognized ‘ the _ notions of’ the to ~.'' *3. .:::= l.§’::"“°‘ ram m ta ‘op see or‘ coon . s matte the second Polynesian Klngdombased upon constitutional low in the islands of the Persian. It is also decided to nvk recognition of the United States Government, and proper steps tennis and have been tslten for the pur- ifies: of presenting the demand in due ecuon. ..".*'°' :i“i.:".‘.“.l° ":2" "2: '.:*“°'.:‘*°'°* °‘ . ems e e u o r y p x , uy thgt the Government wulgfsdly recognize the new kingdom, and stance name 5 Oousul and rspretcntntivo there. ' That steinberger has been successful in his ‘own way is a fixed fact, and tbs: he has de- veloped into a. full-blown monarohist is very evident. This is enough to arouse the animos- ity of two classes-—thoeo who heretofore had the upper hand in Samoa, and the tsithtul representative of the American esgie, who dceirtd ‘a rim le, patriarchal re ublican gov- ernment fort e barbarians. It s stated upon good s;)fhi:riI.yx‘that Unitcdt Sfgtcsd Convtgl ‘our-r s s ro: opposed o o clogs stelnbc r. and’thsl.J. hf. Coe. late Consul, .la hnnd- n-glove with Mr. Foster. Both pir- tiea have forwsrdcd documents on the state of ‘affairs to Wuhin on.‘ The oral chsrgo ‘as’-n-t the From er in that he badeo do- n ruiit the islands could have been annexed to the United States. The natives were in- .clin¢d to accept a republican vernmeht in Ego tererce to a monarchy; but micr8tcin- rger scented to be everything, and he use carried his point. Ills’ enemies will lobby at Washington during the next Congvesl to de- tbrone him, so far as Washington politicians can do it. are loud In his praise. and any be has done wonders. A is is more orderly and prosper- ous -then it its * ever been, peace provsils throughout the blends and the natives appear to be contented. ills enemies, on the other hand, assert that is e numbers of them, headed by dlaappolnte chiefs, are read to start a revolution on the most sp roved ox- lcan fashion. it lstslr to give oth sides or the question. United States Consul Foster had gone to Psngo-Pango with his wife and family. Hrs. Foster is unsure of the Bociet Ialttntls, and will open a trading store at ango-Pnngo. Mr. Lee late United States Consul, Ins ect- lng as Y cs-Consul in Apia, during the ab- sence of Potter. ‘ _ ’l"he'Bon.sc of Nobles ‘acts in Supreme court tr: ‘'0 M’ ‘andhearsflappoals talten‘ from the District‘ .Co'orte. ,No native lswyers had hung. out 1 their shingles, but a. tow, ambitious 8st-noses. were anxious tohave ynlcckstene and Kent is-enslsietl. ,.A.whlte man started thejoko. edvou the trees, ‘um y'—¢' rs rims‘ t. "M 1'"“r1t1g°mi't so e run eon .. no so Etniubllo suction. e.‘ on or its lands on the 1bjntJnnnsryncx._... ..«.. ,—. mine tremierfihf: sent to pertiea in netneisco roposed ginga as and {grating outfit lg _ is. It is] proggle. that e out ltoaxner vr I take down msterlal to,stnrtr.n"'o organ," do Government gworkand ob printing. - . -. . .- Colonel teinbergor inn inveterate smoker. andthis ‘is said,te be his strongpclnt with the natives. Tb hive no faith in amsnwho lsnotitgoodsrno ‘because the thinkluoh spersonlswcak in mind end I y. ‘Iris curious butisntnct. The §a.moc ns atApla are badly, in want of efuhlonahle boot-mnker and as fashionable tailor‘. A fine opening for-3 Cris in. and "the ninth part of it man." Blac mlths ‘Kid uirpenlen have long been catebllshed ere. .. . ~ . . ‘rhelut census taken is’ the missionaries guiges all the islands apopu ation of thirty-ell: nsand. A tnveiln Lhologzsphie institution from Anolrnila on Apin and exhausted the piece. It hlsiesty hlelloton “act torhis piclur." but ellhorttho original or the pro- mgu nnsblo to produce a strikingly line No 81:-,l?e.f. has been formed yet, the Pro? ruler not being able to and the right kind of material. - The no started here. some months ago that Prom er Steinbergcr was about to marry "the sdcrxbie Samoan ‘l’rlnecss_‘8oios” had reached Apia, throu h journals brought by the schooner Ade . The news crested some astonishment in eshlonablmolrcles: but the whlioisdiee would not believe that the beentltul barberisn had Premier. Thoother story thnt Btelnberger _‘Ihndedb(Bll paying his addresses to -another si- e Bans can Princess, the hsif-cute dsughtci-,of on American. was dlsbelie\'ed. When the Premier read the papers contain- ing ihcfotflip "be burnt outs. iaughin“.” re- tilird h exclaimed, “Boheinlane are the ruin of king- doms‘ butI tun invincible." '1‘hatthc.l.’ro- ‘micr is popular with the lsdlcs is more than robsbie, and it be can ward oil’ the wiles nod seolnallons of the South Sea Venuscs he will have conquered where nearly all men have failed. 1t is certain that King Malietos in ambitions to link in marriage some ro‘n| beauty wi b his right hand man. for In do ng so he won tl slrenfthen the throne and the kingdom. If Co anal Stelnborger will not ghe tsp;hls bscheiorlite for a marriage with the belle of the Ssmoau islands, she may be cs rried‘cfl by Prince Lelleohuka of the Sand- wich Islands. This prince is tbezhi-other of King Knlaltsua and heir sip erect to the throne. He cannot find it to mate either in Hawaii or Tshltigx but in he could easily procure en vi: to once his Eden. The friends of thegroat Premier * - ton selnher esp 1or.the' e meerchaum, took it. few wbltfi and- .tliCl'.£ll’{‘ 2'8 3-.Lfi£}D‘£'., htustonaz "Roles of the sevenueutn Century. - 1li*eesauoc33eswuIoar-est.) ‘the center srcehly meeting oi the blow England itlstorlc Gcneniogleital Society was held yesterday afternoon. Tnemost letereso tng restore of the meeting, and one which et- '12:-rteti s very tutti attendance. in I W?! lie“ zeruimng and instructive’ piper out ~ the Ancient Psalmodyof Itznericr, by the Rev, hills; Essen, well lmosvu as a preacher. 3&4?“ zurcrsnd anther. He regarded the music of s. people so a. kind of exponent oi their mental i-mpnamint and culture.’ The stem Ee- gllln Puritans were not much given to -music’. and sometimes included singing ztltogether from their public worshi . The 'E’i mouth Pilgrims, however, in-cog I. over wit them music to enliven the eoiitudes of the wilder- ness. - So tar as are could leamihey bad sue: one boo}: at songs, good old Henry reins-rennin * ‘Book of Z‘eoiim‘,}}ngll't-lvesf both in prose sod vane,” published at Amsterdam in mid. The notes; were dlamendmhs ed. thus an symbolizing the angulsrity. bet or the mu: :2 and the poetry, but though their songs were rude the vest rin _vu.sin them. The early settlcrsot Row stnti tiny: e on e- ationally. Rising in their seeds: of clog the pater sod not in unison each line as itwsvwiined out” or “decocned otl‘.’“ The rule was ‘to sing 111010 of "Old Hun- dred" to a beating at the pulse, which is :16 iciwt one-third quicker than we now reu- cr t. While the notable work oi’ Ainsworth torm- ed the leading musical uxxuiui of the early Iettlers, and evasjtsed in the drst church at Plymouth even as me as 1691. Mr. Bissau one or the opinion that tbeeelebrsted version or the realms by the reepectcb tires or Blernhold 5: Hopkins (11518) was to some ex- tent sdopted. an edition of which Wu printed it Cambridge in 1003. It oootaincdsome any tunes, the in of which is Guillaume Frtxc '1 "old little red.” Of the -itncn who mule this version oi the Psalms old ‘rhomsx fuller uld, *"t'heir_ pletv was better thus their try.” The versions of the Psalms given Alnevcorth were considered bit 3118 Mti let- uerrtoo tree and liberal, too secular so pui- fane, and the cl ween rtyd liebrsiete. l wke; theretore £1‘ ed toprodncteme ‘new ver- 1 more ctoec rs o . fioulagflgigpben y d in lgisgiltih s 17 , ng press end tontof ill-cut tfipe. Hie rintln ottlce was an unfinished to in Pres cut c Duneter's house. hisboda M‘ ......*‘ ”°"t:.':i::'r....tf°*“' e rose: at . his outhfni collesgne John ‘Eliot, to ‘tltgr wit ‘the l_;niIi.lXl-D‘:dR1lgIArl’ed‘?l1{hcI’ o ?1.).>r- ebea er moon I vo steed 1.- ms wéh; lbi:einme'hvLrw:erui: hand‘, fig went I it too or run to of flhcmiiit roots and msetrical mody. Other dlvines rode behind, _cnd after cutting, slashing. mending, bending. twisting, turn- ing. bsulringhlbresklog, match! and patch- ing, theytln yoameoot in 1 6 throufh the unwelcome type of Stephen .sy, w to. 3." “'3: ”“ih.”‘:°“&’;."€’° ”‘:.‘.’:°.;’.f.l’.'.‘%l; on con 2: . e‘ poor?od the‘ nnctuauzon sue seboto r%::lnd one o ‘rune Date a r x. ese versltlcd paalma must avemglu as the ‘most unique specimen ot poetical tinkering in our literature. An editionct the Bay Palm Bcolr, revised byI’rosldent Duusicr, aided by Blott- ezd Lyon, and printed by Samuel Green, sp- peared in ma, buts ll it contained many -pr dmene of rough vcnc. 23- ”“.:*:::‘*§...*‘“..‘*° .‘l':l"‘:::”"»'si ll “.2 -rt on . . mne too ciss106l,cn tied “We.-meKe-ux?-bom- so ke—too-bone-com is Dsvid.” Cotton Mather said the Indiana had excellent singing or psalms with most ravishing melody. l-iuo s change in a new workon paalnndy met with none resistance, but aided by a boot on *§‘?.i.?.".‘3.‘.‘€i':‘.°f.l*’s'?.’.*i‘:.: ‘i§‘.“a°i‘,"’i‘1..‘i‘..'. r’}:.Z’t gradually msdeitswafinto the public eer- vicie. mother pliiltklstpsgt this bank 7faailflpPg1_b~ eco“nbomn ‘or ce each of the Sainwin New i:‘.ngiand.” The ninth American edition ms printed with a few tunes, the flrsi. music engraved in this coun- try in me. The music ws.s~ln two pnrtl, treble and base, soda four directions were given for betting these tunes within the coin- pus oi the voice, so that the people may slug them ‘ ‘without streaking sbovoor grumbling below.” James ‘ranklln, brother of Ben- . ilshtnln, rlnted the we edition in 17!). neon bee pnbliabgd L’ revised edition- in 1758, which was introduced lntohis church the 8abbeth“nl’tcr' his‘ ‘ ‘jeccaee‘,'0ct.'2: ‘oi ‘the same year. An cdltiosrof this was printed as .lato as 1178, Ind used in one of our churches up to the commencement of the preeent cen- tury. It passed through as msuyas 70 edi- uone, the last a few yesvs ago as it literary curiosity at $10 per copy. It is doubtful whether women were allowed to mingle their sweetvoloes with t he thorou h tones of the men in public worship in a times of the Pilgrims. The pious forefathers would not tolerate musical instruments in the nncl.u:ry,nct even I pitch pipe being permitted in the esriy times. In ltrib a law was enacted in one of the Sister tbst “no one should play on any iuIl.rtl~ ment of music exec t the drum, the trumpet and the vltvaharp.’ land when in 173.3 the Dean of rkeiey presented a splendid orgsn, new in the Trinity Church, Newport. to the town which bears his ns.me,' the people in. public martin ,voted that “an organ is an in- strument of devil for the cntnapping of menleeouls,” sndeo declined to accept the bcncfnotio . ' ~' ' ~ V Thus the wretched palm singing of our on- ccstors went on for n hundred years with these meager selections, without the aid of instru- ments or female voices. It wu-bed enough in the beginning. and evident] grew vvorae. hot it tingle tone was com and not a sin- gle mn wriiten._ They ad no time for it or to cu tivete utaste for music. The dsrk ofpealmody had come; The college had ces:§d' to teach music. trite e could sing but three or tourtunee, so these only by vote, and sacred music had come to_ruoh s misera- ,.ble condition that in 1721 the “Kev.-_ Thames, -Walter wrote tbethed be heard‘ ‘Oxford rune” .'sung in threeychurchcs ‘with as much differ- ence on there could possibly be between as many Iditl'sren.t= tunes: '~ The Rev. . Thomas »Welter instituted a reform in sacred song by 1. west: entitled the, (‘Grounds and Roles of "Music," which threwthe'chn.rohos into‘ oom- mclloc, some battling tonne old and somsfor‘ the new wry ofyeioging that-1I,by rote ornote. .Two yesrs attcrtho ubliootiou ‘of this book s. writer in’ c New '_ V "1 have ’grest;e:tlo , ' thatit we onccbogiu to etngby note. the next thing will be to may by role. and then, cornea Folgery.” . In 1823 the Rev. Ssmne lies of Bralniree suspended eight members of his church for reistiog to ring lnthc new 'way—by ngte. hey were, however. soon restored by decree of council; and the cringe tlonvru ordered to "sin by rote sndru ternstel eailsfs on; or both Portion". . es, however, 1!}: so b ttcrly ‘igpoud to the “croichels? thntDec.,1 in . he held ser- vice in his own house rstber. than to lure ‘his conscience rgitattd by the singing from the .‘ 'po [sh notes”-—-leaving his deacon: to mus- sge e_‘_'czochety sticks’? no best they could in the meeting house. , . ' . The most enlightened of tho defy. how- ever sdvocnied the use of notes such so Cot- dtisther and Jonathan Edwards, and through their influence public sentiment was chsngcd so that on the ‘ills of May, 1743 the church in Hanover Mum, voted to sing in the "new we .” This contrnvenydevelo ed the sin ingec ool,n how England nstitut on, vthlch. . Hiteon warmly euiogir.cd,'ead de- scribed in lhe'_most telicltout menner. :'i.‘he ilrst singing acool of which he had khowled e was or Izod‘ by Dr. Beniamln Coienssn s »Bociely Brnttlo street, Boston -in 1720, and John Sticknoy and wife taught a singing school in Iliad ey, hints}, as early as‘ 178.3. Thcs_e'rchools had become quite common from Maine to Georgia at the commencement oi the -pit-rent. century: ‘ - The ringing school led to the formation of the choir, and galleries were raised as far no pcltrihie from the pulpit, and into then gathered the vocal party to “do up" the music for the convrz-gntion. The chair is stitrcusenlinl to the very exist- ence of road church music, and the members of the choir are perhaps as highly c lured and as read to join in the lmtnorul so gs as anv part of l. o congregation. be giving of the key-note of the tune in public worship wu e matter of serious dini- cull with our fathers. Somellmcsit wav done by t o minister. it was voted by the people a Chas-leztcrwn, March 7, 1781, that Mr. Stephen Badger, .ir., “be desired to read and set the psalms, end that he be excused hi: poll use so long as he shall odlcinto in said vioik.” it was inmost its hard sometimes to, cloud Chronicle said. ‘ ml. the pasture as so relate the hearts:-.9 ages;-g, The “inner” one seemed in hie evens: iiivztleah j by e2.e::eie~.: toaireneeot, eensemtmo sweat»;- trstezy ‘iv’:-filers or sacred fionnxwlflneic or the art; were i'itcrim-Queer - thingltke as mouse trap, eesféeel apilmh pipe. it is it int-reduced §i§‘.‘d that ezhriroleeg enteritis- lolly. itryi cut. of xtgaht am} acted 1. ffofit Hi! to fix: es Kit}; on at Iwttie of breed?’ ite a eleven roe:-ls. hit. Serum inane. exhibited 1%: ;.::fi:t§e?§;ummenm, which bores ' .- in-Ir’ rs: .~1—£F’§’;'*é%“.f;E‘..”.."‘,.”=l'».’*<* ;"“‘*" in W ‘ ‘ ’ ‘n’€¥ 93. 6 triielititr. ’3*".‘; 3-‘I W3 iilrcd 13> luvs». the l:.xt'§si: ,1 [yam-pg. tier by ohm Plifcfl, who even the 4cf:i<>rl‘«stor 3.h£ro_fora:b-out thlrtgyeatn, it wg-._. ;,_.:; ;., the lice-char-rte: An": e§w¢5a.e uteri: its-tr).-»te.; mt-;t?"$’Z;3é_‘%‘\,"9’t§x¥.tit’al bakes flezce. vein ;}.§¢d_ Q? hczzelgigisfi, nrtho ‘;g.§:r