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Judge and the Play. As We Like It— Modjeska’s Rosa- lind. “The boodle al- dermen have stolen all the stars out of the American flag and are now wear- ing the stripes.” — The O' Reagans. \ The “deathlike silence” which has suddenly come over the daily press leads to the supposition th Lonsdale hasn't Benzine within a mile of Mi Cameron for a day or two. Offenbach and Lilian Russell ‘* bucked ” against ‘‘The Tin Soldier” in San Francisco with the usual satisfactory result—to “The Tin Soldier.” It 1s now in order for the effete east to put in a satirical word or two anent the refined tastes of the remote west. Will the latter please stand up ? “Yellow and black checked hosiery are fashionable just now, but are too ugly to re- main in favor lon That depends. If the rotundity of the article is up to the required standard and the wearer be connected with comic opera the ugliness of the combination will have nothing to do with its popularity. east side theatres, Poole’s and the People njoying the prosperity which inevitably follows clean management, Al- though situated in the lower part of the cit; where it is popularly supposed that red fire Two popu and the regulation blood and thunder drama | constitute the only potent attraction, these houses since the season opened have offered nothing but what refinement and the general | good taste of the more aristocratic portions of the city might ask for. The fellow who says there is nothing quite so saddening as to see a chorus girl trying to hide behind herself the first time she appears in tights has never come home froma prohibi- tion meeting at two o'clock in the morning and gone through the cross-examination of the de- rtner of his joys. A chorus girl in ysium along side of a man similarly arrayed under these circumstances. The dif- ference is that the one wears hers on the out. side while the other wants to but can’t. The task of knocking out Shakespeare, Lord Bacon and Ignatius Donnelly has been left to a Philadelphia manager, who does himself proud in thus announcing an engagement at the Chestnut street theatre : The management takes pleasure in present- ing the sterling act: Mrs. D. P. Bowers, supported by Mr. J Wheelock anda thor- oughly competent company, in the late John Brougham’s greatest work, ‘* Macbeth.” There is a suspicion abroad that the man- agement took something stronger than pleasure the night before and hadn't succeeded in work- ing it off up to the hour of going to press. “The late John Brougham’s greatest. work, Macbeth,” is pretty good for Philadelphia. SIGNS OF PROSPERITY. Visitors to New York, and people in pursuit of good things will be surprised at the changes in the Sturtevant House, Broadway, corner 29th st. The house has been entirely re- fitted, and has a new elevator, new plumbing, &c., and is kept on both the American and European plans by the thor- ough hotel men, Messrs. Matthews and Pierson. Moderate Prices prevail, with everything of the finest grade. Sidpe- THE C1 . i (or more), with from forty to eighty tlustration five thousand. irr " periodical of its was founded in “The Century the best ed beginning with point of attracti serial which has a history of ou forth in LI ‘coln, and contin Robert T. Linco Lincoin before associated with Lincoln in 1860, death all his ane inside history o tration—important details of which during the coming year, but will by no means Chicamauga, Sherman's March, will appear. “The Hundredth Man," a novel by Frank |Tiger?” etc., begins in November. Two nov Phelps, and others will be printed during the y¢ to Siberi prisons P pers on The Food Questi Problem; English ap Cathedrals; Dr. Eagle Colonies; Men and Women of Queen Ann ualism, Astrology, ete., by the Rev. J. M. Buck! astrononomical papers; articles throwing light THE NOVEMB Ready November Ist. E FIRST CHAPTERS OF THE LIFE OF LINCOLN, Described above, including the editorial present- ent and author's preface; with a new frontis- piece portrait of Lincoln, and nineteen illustra- i is installment, entitled ** Lincoln as ” gives the ancestry of the President, and | n between the Lincoln family and | Daniel Boone; also Lincoln's boyhood and early manhood, and a graphic occount of the frontier States in the earlier days. OLD CHELSEA. By Dr. B. E. Martin. Describing a picturesque | suburb of London, once the home of Queen Elizabeth, Nell Gwynn, George Eliot, Carlyle and other famous characters; illustrated by Sey- mour Haden and Joseph Pennell. MACHINE POLITICS IN NEW YORK, By Theodore Roosevelt, Including chapters on “ Heelers,” ** The Social | Side,” “The Liquor-Seller in Politics,” “+ Boss Methods,” etc., ete. THE FATE OF A VOICE. A Story by Mary Hallock Foote, hor of “The Led-Horse Claim,” ‘ John Bode- Testimony,” etc., with one-full page illus- tration by the author. : | GEN. HOOKER’S APPOINTMENT AND REMOVAL. An anonymous article by a gentleman who was at army headquarters in Washington at the and the name of the corporation which published it be Co.” . YY. d This great work, begun with the san the life of Abraham Lincoln n’s papers on Religious Life in th Reign, by Mrs. Oliphant; Clai lother recent discoveries; A GREAT ENTERPRISE. THE CENTURY FOR 1886-87. ENTURY is an illustrated monthly magazine containing one hundred and sixty pages ns. It has a regular circulation of about two hundred thousand copies, often reaching and sometimes exceeding two hundred and twenty- Of these a large edition is sold in England, where it has been the ading class for upwards of ten years. The magazi 1870, In 1881 it took the hame * The Centui It has been called by the N N agazine in the world.” The coming y ‘November, will be the most remar! ions in its history. been in active preparation for sixteen years— 1 own country in its most critical time, as set THE LIFE OF NCOLN By his confidential Secretaries, John G. Nicolay and Col. John Hay. ion of President Lin- ued under the authority of his son, the Hon. oln, is the only full and authorative record of Its auth were friends of his presidency; they w most intimately him as private secretaries throughout his term of office, and to them were transferred upon Lincoln’s private f the have papers, Here will be told the il war and of President Lincoln's itherto remained unrevealed, that they might first appear in this authentic history. By reason of the publication of this work, THE WAR SERIES, which has been followed with unflagging interest by a great audience, will occupy less space be entirely omitted. Articles on Ge ung, c., with stories of naval engagements and prison life, OVELS AND STORIES. R. Stockton, author of “The Lady, or the elettes by George W. Cable, stories by Mary Hallock Foote,‘ Uncle Remus,” Julian Hawthorne, Edward Eggleston, Elizabeth Stuart ear. Poa SPECIAL FEATURES (with illustrations) include a series of articles on affairs in Russi Kennan, author of ‘‘Tent Life in Siberia,” who has just returned fi and Siberia, by George ma most eventful visit jon, with reference to ity bearing on the Tab ne vance, ley, D. D., editor of the Christian Advocate on Bible history, etc. ER CENTURY. dition, 250,000 Copies. CONTAINS: FIRST CHAPTERS:OF STOCKTON’S NEW NOVEL. This love-story of real li Man,” is different from an yet undertaken. It will run through twelve numbers of THE CENTURY. THE NEED OF TRADE SCHOOLS. By Richard Auchmuty, founder of the New York Trade Schools, with illustrations, GETTYSBURG. THE FIRST DAY’S BATTLE. By Gen, Henry J. Hunt, Chief of Union Artillery, with maps of the Gettysburg Cam- paign, by Gen. Doubleday, and numerous illustra- tions. AN ART PAPER. By Charles Waldstein, On the Temple of Diana of the Ephesians, and in which the author identifies an ancient silver plate lately found i France as the work of the silveramiths of sus, whose industry is described in the Testament. Illustrated. THE DEPARTMENTS include editorials on “The American 3 “The Congressional Balance-sheet,” are open letters on “A Siberian Tragedy,” George Kennan, “Time-Reckoning for the Twen- tieth Century,” by Principal Grant, of Kingston, “Genius and Matrimony,” “The ‘Architectural League of New York,” with short verse, a satire “The Hundredth hing the author has time of the events described. Subscript take subscriptions. prospectus, etc. by Bill Nye, etc., in “Bri price, $4.00 a year, 35 cents a number. Dealers, postmasters, and the publishers Send for our beautifully illustrated 24-page 't catalo; (free), containing full THE CENTURY CO., New York.