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Show Thb Telephone for love Makinc "The king," writes a correspondent correspond-ent from Madrid, "spends with his bride all the time allowed him by etiquette and public affairs. He hastens to Aranjuez, where she is staying, and dunu the journey the royal Leauder- will notnetimee look out at the curriagu window to see ou ihf boriznn the harp tret'B under whinh Philip II inspired agniust the eutii-cienre of the world. When he returns 'rnui Arai juz bin impatience letiiirf bin) io u p-rt of the piai'e where imrfJptn science litis pltced its latent diecovHry st the service of tin. njal 1 ver, nd anuihi latest tLo sp'tce which for two dayH leugtT sepinitPii h;tn from hid bride. A tflt-phoiiH, iu fct, has been fitted up ccuueclLiig one of the king's rooms with that of Prioceas Mermls, and enabling them to converse con-verse logeiher iree Ironi iudiecreet eyes and enra. Strauss I.i think that the tfk'phoue nli uld tiiuw c;t the bet irr of tbe traditional and implacable etiquette of a court whure !he king (wunot g't au egg boiled without six rtuceesaivo messengers ami sixteen pairs ol hitudi. Yet more slrauge ia a love so rarely found in the loftiest stations, and which tumid only Bpriug up i and g"ln t ru;lli because two hearts mel in the solitude of exile far from the f.ictuiuui pomps of courtly constraint. |