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Show Women and Woman. ' Miss Florence ltobinson gives this picture of Amelia Keeves Chandler, whom she met at a diyner party in Paris: "I know of no one nearly as lovely to compare her with. 1 never saw hair like hers, except in paintings. She wore a white tea gown, paitly oiien in front, exposing a mass of soft, beaded white lace, a gold girdle about her waist, a tiny, red silk turban on her head, and red hose and slippers; withal she was a perfect picture. Her dinner costume was a soft, clinging gown of a light blue shade, with a heavy blue robe girdle, and a plaited cape made of the 6ame material as her gown, carelessly care-lessly thrown about her shoulders. A London letter says: "The liaro-ness liaro-ness liurdett Coutt has left England for a ramble through Italy, lb-r j her health is very precarious nnd the effects of her recent accident are telling tell-ing severely upon her.'' Did she take her youthful husband with her? Mrs. Catherine T. Shipley, who died in Salisbury, Md., last week, claimed i direct descent from Lord Macon through her father. Donnelly should give the '. good woman a monument. i Atchison filohe: There is a woman in Atchison who wears a woolen r dress two seasons herself aud then makes it j over for the oldest daughter, 't hen the j baby has a turn, and then it appears iu i the rag carpet, and yet her husband I does not think she is economical, i The first person to vote in the Fourth i ward at Leavenworth on Tuesday of j last week was Mildred Ann Clay, a I colored woman IDS years old. Aud she j stuck in a democratic ticket, too. |