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Life, 1898-02-24 · page 15 of 20

Life — February 24, 1898 — page 15: what you’re looking at

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Life — February 24, 1898 — page 15: Life, 1898-02-24

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answer is first ree , for the contest would then be no better than a mere lottery. It is easily possible, by careful read- ing and some persistence, to find the sentence that has been selected to fit the picture. Lire candidly hopes that the victors may be few. He goes further, in wish- ing it may be only one; still further, in WORM'S-EYE VIEWS OF US. A RALLROOM. that it may be a lady whose fortunes are better deserving of a pecuniary replen- ishment than brother, some more plutocratic HE sense of propriety which ought to keep bicyclists off Fifth Avenue on Sunday morning seems tobe inoperative. Asphalt was not put on the avenue for the convenience of the bicyclists, but so that pedestrians, who like to watch the carriage people, should not be deafened by the immense clamor of the stone pavement. A few bicyclists on weekdays may be tolerated on the avenue, but drovesof them on Sunday morning won't do. They do not accord with the spirit of the street at that time. They are not pretty. nor clean; they do pot wear their best clothes; their manners lack distinction, and they are noisy. They will oblige many persons, pious and worldly, by sticking to the Boulevard and Eighth Avenue on Sunday, and especially by avoiding Fifth Avenue between ten o'clock and twoon that day.