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new and Musi with rather dr the a | the two Squares togg costumes off the stage footlights, very, Atten' he E ion Hee ently Wall, *Thaum: Lair, and talk “optical illusion under the management of who is dir two sim Du. Leoroiy Dasnosen has arrived from | other side at The Cr the other side, and in due time the singers he has engaged for the Metropolitan Opera House will follow in his footsteps. ‘The directors of the new house expect to inaugurate great changes inside its lofty walls. The boxes are to be embellished with red satin draperies, and more color will be | jy introduced in the interior decorations. ; it ¢ it suits the public, and the publi for High notes, high prices and bigh Dateh | their seata, Adonis.” “The. Private See- will prevail and Damrosch and the directo and “ Investigation” have been mak- are expected to havea high old time, general- ft the society elegantes can be induced "he Eric Bayley company, with Florence to wear high-necked dresses the transforma: | Girard as leading lady ape ion from last season’s performances will be | (i "ho y + apy Son " ST ane at The Fifth Avenue, and * Picani complete. Mapleson, as usual, isina finanicial strait. | je Who ever knew him to be in any other con- A an) Ge dition? If things go to suit him, and the d ing fun does fairs may not suit the baby elephant is an vens) urlay Compa rect Theatre Academy directors come forward in'a gentle- | ‘thomas Dare anly manner, he will appear at the proper | \farriage,” at season with an astonishing galaxy of Prit K Donnas, viz, Patti, Nilsson and Sc a host of smaller fry. Mapelson as manager of such a trio | leasant prospect before him! Patti Nilsson together will be two less embrace the first opportunity to repeat her great breakfast that caused Mr. Abbey no end of annoyance last Spring. Gerster and Campanini are out of the operatic arena altogether, and will only be heard in concert for some time to come. In the mean time Mr, James Barton Key has got in Ais Italian Opera business ahead of the other it changes have taken place both on and off the stag yeen turned into | hy chi, with and troublesome as | cr; acred elephants, and Scalchi will doubt- The lobby has a foyer, the box office has moved down nearer | tre: nd there are now two entrances nth Street. This ‘* Milan Grand It: pany,” from Mexico is to ian Opera Com- ve us the same old ‘T'rovatore, Rigoletto, Faust etc. bus ness at popular prices. One or two new | or operas, “ L’Ebrio” and “Il Guarany” are promised. We don’t know what this last one mentioned isall about, but me isstrange- General was John Duif’s Compan Theatre, Williamsburg cy)—** There is ad likeness of a gross fat man.” A. well-pos CANDIDATE everybody with court that the Kansas Saint was such an arrant We always supposed that he ed people with cold water or nothing. pocrite. ‘Tue Clevel ified qu ly suggestive of a favorite remedy for a sick | leper. headache. he jannini, the principal tenor of the troupe, has warbled in Xe ew York before, but didn’t “catch on,” so to speak, now bears the stamp of F proval but will no longer waste his sweetness on the desert air of ( ‘alifornia. He is re- | M commended by one of Frisco’s critics as being apparently “climate proof;” and one night, against his physician’s orders, he arose from his bed, with an ulcerated throat and a high fever, and warbled sweetly all of Edgardo’s music in “Lu Damarini, the Lucia of the occasion, does not come in for the same amount of praise, and we are told that her inability to sing the fioriture resulted in a “brutal mangling of the score.” This is bad, Dam-erini bad, but enough of Opera! | at This week secs the Wallack company at | qu Miner’s People’s Theatre. Rose Coghlan and b uncisco’s ap- | see it Cleveland dresses remarkably well. He | ladies—the ladies that is who get a ch y that his manner of a necktie is just sweet. “Witte E noted ubove, nd mone ed M ders the n New Yor any at Nible kipping —Wm. Ri © playin the Brook r gsc St. John and. re radia THE JUDGE. several other ladies appear inan old ph ashion now is in its ¢ ck’s, Dal and those behind the en Muse e is ©: exhibiting an English A you She s,and shake: or whatever it is, is nD ilar show ystal Pala and the other at the Folies Bergeres, nd several other unfortunate stars till suffering from nervous prostration, is all very well, but just at present, This state of aesthetic critic but rk. right along. dition to the ¢ y's, Harris t The Fe Jmond in lyn ‘Tue true prince (to poor bewildered Demo- evil haunts thee in the husetts they sa and organs forgot not to remind their readers that the gentleman who, on the | threshold of the campaign, pronounced their candidate a moral leper, afterwards recalled his harsh words. mean that the gentleman in the light of later | devlopements has reversed his decision, and | now cons idate an Blaine, are tramping round, Clev in modest seclusion and lea as becomes, etc. mean to Batler, and St. John and keeps himself ds a laborious life It is the custom fora good | Cleveland, if elected, will be the youngest of many gentlemen to keep themselves in modest seclusion at hard labor. Sing Sing, Some of them do it Does the unkind editor, insinuate uffalo man is training for the penitentiary. ant in new Fall on is divided betwe form t r next week and M A Midnight Theatre, and eat The y, ** treats We had no idea justing his On the other hand, r. Barnum and the rest of the eminent statesmen who occasionally tive office only pray never attempt to adjust our neckties.” 7 and | glo ly’ 3 and n the png lady wings in s hands, r. Lynn, son the the Seven | nand purteenth. nny Novelty newspaper | informs us that Butler has had his eye on the White House for the last eight year: we never did more than half belie riously aiming to get there, Well, | there is none, broth that the | Dark Desires. I’p like to hab a de Tob Vd like, Likes tot lar note for Blaine, to cast my wote; a doze. Hikes to hear de ole banjo, wise 1 L likes «le tle bones; fiddle and de my Sall mw ly Jones yar corn, L likes de L likes camp meetin 's you born, I likes to smoke an’ chew, Likes to hug dat Sally Tlikes to dance eoti But what I lik Ia de *Pone is the South. Waterm a loaf made of corn-meal well known in He cow-boysare for Cleveland and going for him wildly. They count it a big streak of fun to run a Buffalo \didate. count St. John doesn't much on Marry Hotspur. The saint has found out that the knight 18. a Water—son only in name. Old Hendricks (to up: thy servant a dog’s tall, him? rt Cleveland) —“Is that thou shouldst If Mr. Blaine had been content, other distin, aatesmen, to bring upa family on the uropean plan, no enter- prising Democrat would have had the eurio- sity to pry into his m; eH birth-day of his first-born. like some “ What profit, ing all this filth at ter all, is there in throw- v. Cleveland?” Verily, or the same reason that there is no profit in carrying ¢ to Newcastle, or shipping wet blankets to Bar- num’s headquarters. “Tt is an open seeret that Gov. Cleveland is prevented from taking the stump ‘by his sense of dignity, Sense of Dignity? What a name! In Connecticut he is known as Bill Barnum. In the United States they call him Seven Mule Barnum, ‘The meaning of that ambiguous plank in Does this | immoral | The nce to Hat the Execu- | ga “may this Buffalo man that the the Democra platform which different leaders have been explaining in different ys is clear at last. It means neither free | trade nor protection, It means defeat. If The World (of New York) isa truly | heavenly place, the clergymen of Buffalo are a set of unanimous liars. The other world has made up its mind to impartially believe neither of these propositions, It is loudly whispered that Grover, in the that are gone, was a little fast-living en ‘on, youunderstand. But his nominaton may be his reformation, In these, his bet- ter days, he can see nothing but wickedness even in a ball—especially in a Buffalo Ball. a The faithful Clevelander is moved to call attention to the ‘remarkable fact,” that the Presidents. | Atthe me time it maybe noted as a fact, not at ull remarkable, that Cleveland is not, by a precious sight, the youngest man that never was and never will be elected President, comicbooks.com