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T Ramie L i tng LAk DAILY BEK-OWAHA, TUESDAY, MARCH 18, A Striking§Pioture of Mormon Lafe. | Brigham Young, whose iron will fnr'mmmiinu being done by different people. [small casement, fitted into the wpper The la’gest Stock i" umaha’ and Makes me lOWF.St PIICES. P New York Evening Post. thirty yoars had been undisputed law, | At presenta great number of flower- |part of u large window, oan often be The following picturs Mormondo is [and whoso resistless grasp had been on | makers are ot of work, owing partly to [opened without discomfort when the from the pen of a gontleman‘whose resi- denco in the territory of Utah has given him‘unusual opportunities of observation For a wholo goneration this has been the minds and hearts of the wholo people | flowars being out of fashion, and partly [ window itself cannot. Advantage should to fetter, and crush, and deform. Since ] to the enormous competition in B be taken of the absence of the inmates to l o p thoroughly change the airina room, A room kept locked up and with closed windows is not in a fit condition to re- A then other railroads have been added, | Germany, Switzerland and and miners by thousands throng the | which increases with every one of the many vexed questions bofore [ mountains, every one a fearless and out- | country, however, can the American people. How shall Mor- |spoken hater of ecclesiastical arrogance [ France in elegance, delic and taste, | ceive its tenants unless a fire is burning $1.000:Would Not"Buvrit, monism be managed? What shall be|and impertinent meddling. An untram- |although the flowers are generally made |or a ventilating flue exists, Simple DRA [’]4‘ RIES ANL MIRRORS \ A : g : m f L Y U £ v A (1 Ny DR, Forsn—1 was & joted with "'*"'";":"“"'l' 18 done to end the crime and scandal which [ melled press has conquered a large place. | after French models. Tt is a curious fact, | methods like these will, when the rooms qured by using balt. | To any one sflictel ¥ith | contro in tho Great Salt Lake basin? | Christian sohools and churches are rapid- | says a complacent Frenchman,that women |are of tolerablo size, the sewerage in good | CC JEIL AN L I 2 X STy ¢ "Any ono can confer with me by writin There sure enough is the seat of a hide. {1y multiplying, so that there are now to | who in France were highly esteemed for |order and the inhabitants not too numer- b my storo, 1420 Douglas """(‘-.I';j;“?:';, ous monster, but how shall a hook be put | be found 90 of the one, with 175 teachers | their taste in the manufacturiug and ar- |cue, fulfill the conditions necessary to Just recoived an assortment far surpassing anything in this market, comprising MAIN OFFICE—Opposito postoffice, into his nose, and he be subdued to good fand 35 of the other, with 10 ministers. | ranging of flowers lose all their ingenuity | health; but wherever furnace or steam | the latest and most tasty designs manufactured for this aprivg's trade and covering st blook. morals and mannera! Nothing is more | Person and property are as safo from [ when, as not infrequentiy happens, they | heat is used, and in all public buildings, | a range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive, For rale at 0. F.j Goodman's Drug ‘store,j111 oFoan B, Omans. L] cortain than that beforo the difficulty can | violence as in any of the states or territo- | go abroad to pursue their calling. a regular systom of ventilation is de- | s—— Ordere flled ©. 0 +5 - bo solved, its real nature must be accu- [ries. Life is tolorable, at least in many — manded, - Ca e & rately understood. The terms of the|communities, for Gentiles, and even for “ t It Out.” i > HENNINGS roblem must shapo the course of the so- apostates from the Mormon church. Bu | Th above fs an old saw as savage & it is Hoodd SapsRpasls Parlor Goods ' Draperies. ation. 'The nation at large, and even |the case oven yet is bad enough, and in | sensoloss, You can’t ‘gruntout’ dyspopma, | poqo o5 5 GRe BT e Now ready for the inspection of cvs- | Complete stock of all the latast IMPROVED editors, statesmen and clergyman, in|any other territory would be counted un. | nor liver complaint, nor a ms it they | 8 O s imedicine to build them up. | tomers, the newest roveltics in atyles in Turcomaw. Madras and SOFT other matters well informed, are here de | endurable. And the evil and curao centro [ o6 g5t 4 f "}“g'"‘[;n) ton & Lew | give thiem &h appetite; Bubiey their blocd Suits and Odd Pieees. Lace Curtains, Ete., Ete, ELASTIC SECTION |Plorably danorant. - Too often rumor and | in the facts which follow. | Sow of ok apt ters is et tha | sn il p the mnchineny of dhalr bodjes. | e ; hctocbebeb st i gossip with regard to Utah affairs have| The most characteristic and essential | “grunting it out What we can cure let's not No other article takes hold of the system passed for settled facts, while blind pro. | feature of Mormonism, as well as that in | endure, e and hite exactly the #pot liks. Hools Elezant Passenger Elevator to all Floors. judice and heated passion have prompted | which it is most hostile to ideas most ' 8 08 10 wotle Tk, ftieto. Wms XBLOIT. Sarsaparilla, It works like magic, reach ing ovary part of thehuman body through CHARLES SHIVERICK, tongues and pons. There is no small | cherished in the nineteenth century, and A DARINC ground for the conviction that the action | especially in this nation, is found in its —_— s, blood; #ving 0 ‘A1l fenewed 108 i CORSET \Is warrantod to wear longe: hefornoneater A0 o bl | of congress two years since was basod | dogma of an inspired and infalliblo priest- | Capt. Teaynor Proposes to Tow a |0 MOOSIRE T O FTTES 1206, 1208 and 1210 Farnam Street, = - - - OMAHA, NEB. n the marker, or prico paid wii | upon a misapprehonsion approaching the | hood, in daily and direct communication Small Boat Acrces the Ocean. LA . v ) Tebndg, Theioemenal! | idiorous, Buch facts as the following | with the Most High, uttering his voice Pttt ETETING BOLT — - v " ; S EaRe B et S B T4 aro patent to every non-Mormon resident |and clothed. with powor and authority | = " By e eevchtoago, | Of Utah, - to rule and fashion in all things whatso- | BA7i, Me., March 14.—Capt. Traynor, e i B o v P The growth of Mormonism and its pre- | ever, whether religious, social, business | Who crossed the Atlantic in the dory City [The Old Sioux Chief Talks Through JOHN H. F. LEHMANN, |sent strength are apt by nllrmintuhtu be [or political. Joseph Smith founded a :afm]fi:.:hv'o';.;:‘.‘,'f" 52.;‘:;";7;2‘:1(;02'1‘“"‘1\' the Telephone, ¥ much overrated, and some would have it [ kingdom of God, literal, temporal, mate- £ e L i i > v X Jammmul !“fltuh that tho nation is 88 much imperiled by rialg—nu mere paltry affair ofl:-apumm\cu, new dory called the Randall D. Bibber (g vy, yinn., special. 1024 North Eighteenth Street, Omaha, on Street Car Line. ) the Latter-Day Saints as by the hordes | faith, baptism,and tho like, but including | has been built for him this winter at| "y foday’s Northern Pacific train [ Chartered by theStateof1ill. | of the qucucd and almond-oyed from over |all civil functions from the mreatest to | Georgetown. It ia 13 feat long on the | om tho want brought into St. Paul Maj. Ei. Wr. DIXON, e o ettt reilefiy | the sea. Last fall the telegraph, multi- | the least, and be they executive, legisla- bottom, 17 feet on top, feot wido on| Jiuoy Mol aughlin, agent i Standing ¥ WHOLESALE AND RETAIT, all'chronic,urinary and pri- | plving the number by ten, made Mr. |tive or judicial. All officials, presidents, | top, and 22 inches deep. The boat o & | Rock, and his son Harry; Sitting Bull, 3 a?:"::,'s;"w‘,,,lflmmfm; Emmunny that 23,400 converts had been | governors, judges, congressmen, and the | ¢abin 8 feet long and 16 inches deep, and | 4o 0 chieftain, and his nephew, nm er lmfl fl[ Uflrs m W Complicatea forms, aiso all | baptized in six months, and so the tate- |like, to hold legitimate power must be [i3 provided with two air-tanks made of | G, "Bull, and Wm, Whitesill, interpro- y y y y y B discases of the Skin and |y one“want forth everywhere. But the | choson by revelation, and must bo of the | tin to float her in caso she should fill or |\ "oiq fdrmer scout, better known on Bloodpromptly relevedand | otal of immigration to **Zion” from tho | holy priesthood. Vox populi, vox dei is | capsize. Traynor intends to start in the | (¥ inc oy «Sport,” Telegrams had ] jes,testedina FortyTears | old world sinoo 1840 s only somo 86,000, |a damnable and heaven-dufying heresy, | frail craft from New York Juno 10, for |y, ounced the coming of the distin: 1 ”‘“i‘,'y Dieamb, P.m;;:l:“o'nl For the first decade the annual o [ Tho people are to have no voice, at least | ristol, "‘"Kh“d'd :‘l" is to row the en-| . i hed party, and thousands thronged oed, poviively cured hers | was 750, for the second decado 2,000, for | the law of the kingdom is vox dei, vox | tire distance, and hopes to "fi‘?‘“l"f‘*‘ the Merchant’s Hotel all day, eager to Ceperimenting, 1he agproptiate remedy | o' third and fourth, 2,600, whilo for tho | populi, i, o., lot. God speak (of course | e journey by Soptembor L. ' His prin. | yyoh o glimpao of the ohisftain. Push- Sonal of by leter, sacredly confidential last five yoars it has ranged from 2,500 to | through Taylor, Cannon, the twelve, the [cipal diet will be cooked oatmeal and |y " ogtling “eager and unappeasable, icines sent by Mall and Express, N 3,000. At the death of the *“Prophet” | high-priests, etc.,) and lot the ballot-box milk, which, he aftirms, will stick by him the people crowded into the corridors e et in 1844 the number of his adherents was | only echo and register the theocratic |Dotter than anything else. His only leading to the room assigned to the Sioux, Washinghon 8L Chicago I | oytimated at 160,000, but so terriblo was | decreo. Here is political bossism with a | companion will boa cat. His dory will | o q ihq appearance of sither of the Indi: the scourging that followed that loss than vongoance. Nor is this merely a dogma 3231? ‘;;:::’";g)‘l‘m‘l““ :i'“ poriog mo¥t lans in their picturesque garb was the ‘e o igi TDOrtod Beer | ik s aszme b aoe s Shiguis ooyt ol 5o 8 S o Sl 5 B o e p large mojority they had lived and died in |is livins and mighty. Under just such a old, and says he looks forward with no| oy o Vs ivan the, slugger was here. the *'Babylon” of “Gientile” rogions, satis- | regime 1» every Latter-day Saint liviny | feeling of fear to hfi' l-)eetnd Voyage across | gitting Bull is fatter than when he came IN BOTTLES. fled with the taste they had lad of Mor- |to-day, and is taught to call it perfect | the ocean sl e A to Standing Rock from Fort Randall,and mon good things. And now, after forty | freedom. This is the crucial test of Mor- e Hesnirestion of Lasaras very different in appearance from the OATS, m*)lt mor‘? than 10"2,000' are ':;)und n;un x.'-glrt.h(;;dtoxy. adfi! golygnmy was an | oo raculous ol;s'rm‘m No 406+ thinke ‘t’hin and ng&ed w];rriclnlr who surrended in all the rocky mountsin territories, | afterthought, an endum, an excres- | i+ oo e imes, though some | by proxy to Maj. Brotherton, at Buford. + Bohemian, | including the lukewarm and children (all | cence, so the law_concerning it may by :Iiaufimrr:gl&fiu::‘g)tg:‘;hen Goor have boon | Betwoen 8 and 9 in the evening Maj. Bremen, | of eight and over are members of the |the priesthood be repealed, but this(completely restored by Burdock Blood Bitters| McLaughlin and the chiefs visited the church), Then tha saving clause of the [absorption of the state by the church, | to ganuine and lasting health. Pioneer-Press office, and the aborigines DOMESTIC. system is found in the ease with which | this preposterous and unbounded assump- e e— were surprised, though they didn’t show Budwei St, Louis. yoke is cast off. Probably 50 per cent, | tion of right to absolute and universal Pure Air for Horses. it, by telegraph, telephone, fire alarm, MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST.OLASS ugweiser. by * | of all who are baptized apostatize sooner | rule is certain to continue to the last. tilation seems an easy matter, yot it (lanm heaters, ete. Sitting Bull t : st sent a U J Anhauser. St Louis. | o; Jater. Thus eight of the eleven “‘wit- | Of course there is no room for political | is in fact oneof the most difficulf prob- | telegram to his son in Chicago, saying n 0 BBSb_& . -M!lwa“ke"~ nesses” fell from grace within ten years, | parties, for how can there be an opposi- | lems which those who are engaged in de- | that he had been sick, and was much Milwaukee. [ and were cut off, and also & majority of |tion when heaven directs the ballot? signing and erecting huildings have to | better, and was answered on the instant. Krug's . .Omaha, | the original “‘apostles,” while of some|The Mormon vote always has been, and | deal. If the external temperature were | The telephone broke him all up,hgnd [ , im. 2 s rug seee Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine | 35,000 converts gained in Swedenbetween | in the nature of the case must always be, always below that of the house itself the forced the first exclamation from D. MA ) T ; Tk ) ! iag ; AND TWO WHEEL OARTS. 1214 Farnam faith before emigration. hierarchy in this thing that this people | summer the external temperature is the [one room and Sitting Bull in a separate (rades and prices as good and low as any ‘n the city. P’21sa trv me. Erlanger,.ccesieesses Culm mf\er, Wine. 1850 and 1882, 11,000 repudiated the|cast solid. It was for following the|task would be greatly simplified, but in |One Bull was placed at an instrument in The mass of the people in Utah are not | came to such bitter grief in Missouri | higher, so that an opening arranged to|room, 100 feet distant. The latter |p, Loloand 1w Hamey thtect Andee. InbiEireel, ) IMAHA. NEB. monsters, horned and hoofed, but, on the | and Illinois, and their very presence be- ,;fv., n’a an outlet bacgme, En inlavf A:, liuten’ed, started, grinned, and then A S o o o0 T o MANUFACTURER OF meaning, conscientious, and as virtuous [and fear, far more than religious, that | by means of its doors and windows; that | ting Bull is not a good talker via the Y a8 the u'me intellectual and social grade | cost the .prophet—oriuinntor of this i)reci- i.y to ,:y, it is by these channels tl:nnnn medium of an interpreter, but in answer ‘A" H' DA'IL.E L ALV ANIZED |RON of English or Scandinavians in Wisconsin | ous scheme of monarchy and despotism | change of air further than that whi.;iv. to persistent questionings the following yfor Minnesota, Belonging by birth to the | —his lifs, And hence, also, it is that | takes place throughthe walls of the house | Answers were received:, ‘I am very much peiy o k3 CORNICES lower classos, and living upon the rough [ between the church-state set up in Utah, | itself is carried on. It is seldom that|pleased with this, my first visit to the Bugmfls Gal'l‘lflg flq a]l Snl‘]flg wagnns W N oourse, and exhibit much of the animal, | dear by every American, an*‘irrepressible | the mean of comfort. Open d d 80 many whites. Your tepees are very i wm%!‘e%gtsk fl"'ruls ET but lio’ontiuulnsu,drunkennenAnddneda conflict” oxists and must continue unti! |windows in midwinter nreppupulc::‘:-;; :ul;. big and very high; I never saw any 80 My} Réposticey S5 oesantly QY wlth: Selochstock. ~ Bost Workmmanabip guan uwe of violenco are far from common. Of |the Mormon prieasthood yield, or else | posed to be productive of otaer things | big before. If the great spirit has mercy | @ffice Farrr+ ~ W. Connar 16th and Lanrie! Avanua Omaha Neb patriotism, it must be confessed, there is [ our 50,000,000 conclude to adopt the |besides ventilation. He who has sat in | this year my people can raise some good rt because born and reared under other din;um that he had full rigllx‘tt t:} med;i}{s ideas and institutions, in pars because |and manage in every particular ‘*from the | throat will scarcely beli: amount to anything. I have not heard i - their coming to this land was far less to setting up of a stocking to the ribbons on J.’:T :}::ed“:;m 'v'nu :mhrc:hys :.:::: from any of my band who are in the (SUCCESSOR TO FOSTER & GRAY.) bocome Americans than Mormons, but|a woman's bonnet,” and some 8,000 or|In the height of summer, on the|Queen’s dominions since I left Randa r ) n ut Sa k other hand, open doors and windows |I have heard some reports about Indi- and rules them is essentially and utterly Brighams in small, and in this particular ) non-American lll:d anti-republican, dOi:;l follow hard nl‘hu‘-i hin;.o Ax;d what 18 the | various artificial systems of ventilation 3:1 hnrhly believe it. hl suffer a kgrut ’ overnment, whether state or federal, | nation going to do about it have been adopted with varying success. with pain in my chest, I smoke too lgnignoud a8 both useless and umrping: A ‘mn‘ Heating and vgnm.fion .ho:ym treated ll:“:iul'lth lprcbntlgly tbt:r t;oub’le, .nIdd!;:va LIME AND CEMENT. " a8 two distinct systems, both of which | had 1t a long time. e reason idn't Ufi' ice and: Yard, 6th and Douglas Sts., maha Ne . T. SINNEOLD, contrary, are honest, industrious, well- [ came intolerable. It was political hate ordinary house is principally ventilated | remarkad, ‘‘Waukau” (Bvil Spirit)! Sit- MANUFACTURER OF FINE frontier, they are rude, as a matter of | and institutions counted most sacred and | yentilation by these ordinary means hits | White people’s home. I am glad to see general and serious lack. And this, in|Utah idea. It was Brigham’s famous|the draught from am open window and |crops on our new farm at Grand River. has immediately afterward suffered | Last year the corn grew high, but didn’t FRED W. GRATY ) chiefly because the church which holds| 10,000 men in and about Salt Lake are | fail to put heated air in motion. Thus |ans dying there for want of food, but I The chief end of m#a in Utah is to stand X by the priesthood and obey it in all | Chicago Herald, Feb. 14, aro necessary; but the attempt 1s often |80 to the Iowa state fair or to the Cin- Pneumonia Prevented. Oyster BAy, Queexs County, New York, April 11, 1883, made to make the first accomplish the second—or no provision is made for the ngs. Polygamy is by no means universel, and may fairly be calied exceptional in second.: e warm air is sent in, and the R i Utah society. There are more men than | I believe I have been saved from a ter-| foul air is allowed to escape as beat it can, | OOU ‘:fl'—:’j‘f Ll QB:,O ’:fi""fl\:‘u%‘mxb’: . women by about 6,000. The cow- rible illness by ALicock’s Porous PLas- | The worst of any artificial system of ven- | Sore Throat, and ‘B:fichnl aaotinna’. Foid r- 7 3 missioners could only find 12,0000r15,000 | rgr's, tilation in a house is that it is sure to | only in bozes. i as & A ; 03 BRADY ST., DAVENPORT, IOWA, U. 8. A. Established 1878—Catarrh,) whom the Edmunds bill disfranchised on |~ About th ago I ttacked | conflict more or less with what may b s HSBRADLE., bl 2 : account of plural marriage. In some|with .“vi(‘)la;o;nin n&a my:l:l!: ackad et vent,ihtioyn b; Fish-Oaught Turtles. Deafness, Lung and Nervous Diseases Speedily and Permanently Cured. Patiente| communitios the number of polygamists | nanied by fover andpreat dificulty in |doors and windows. Tho openinga of | *All thoso turtlos of mine is warranted | [JOured at Homo. | Wrlte for | “tix Mepjows Bisomany,) forthe People, Frce is quite large, and in others very small. Eru@hing. I lprrelmnded pheumonia, | these ordinary outlets and inlets will |sound and fish caught,” said a profession- HON. EDWARD RUSSELL, Postm;ster: D‘zvanport. ‘n.yo; “Pb.yai-;ian o In one county, out of eight bishops only | which is 8o prevalent at nt; I went | change the direction of the air currents, |al turtler to a New York Sun reporter re- " two have more than one fii! f Inp uwi to bed and ;l;apliedB one All]l:::k'n Plu‘:er 2 & ton; anlivy ana Iarked Bucoces. i) CONGREPSMATI SEUREIEY, Davnporsy of 1,600 inhabitants but six families are [ between my shoulder blades, and two on obedient to the ‘“‘celestial law,” and in|my chest. In an hour my breathing was another of 800, but two. Multitudes hold | much easir, in two hours the pain had | part. one by fish. The fish is called a sucker to the theory with great zeal and tenac- | left me, and the next morning I awoke| The only cheoretically correct system | ——" " *‘It's the remora,” put in the sa- ity, but nevertheless in practice are|peafectly free from fever. I went about |of ventilation is that which is employed |vant. “Yes, that's the chap,” replied 1o fama to come. monogamous, and numbers are in open | my business as usual,”andflat the end of |in mines. Here there is no ventillation | the other. ‘‘Has a long, flat head, with 3 opposition both in tonguo and deed. A |a week took the plasters off. save an artificial one. The fresh air is | a regular sucker on it, with flaps rigged meeting was lately held in a certain set- | For the last ten years Allcock’s Plas. |forced downward by a fan,and is directed | jest like a blind like. ~Wall, these are WE CHALLENGE tlement, at which, on the part of the |ters have been used by my family with|along definite channels by bulkheads. |allus follerin’ sharks and turtles about, elders of Israel, thore was great lamenta- | the best effect in colds, coughs, and pain | The cucrent is compelled to take its course | an’ when they git tired they kind o’ turn tion and weeping over the fact that the |in the side and back. through all the workings of the mine,and | over an” fasten on ter the critter and ride rising generation of girls was so depraved E. B. SHERWOOD. finally to pass out through the upcast|along. A heap of these remoras is caught as to be determ to have a whole — This system, theoretically perfect, [ and iept in tubs aboard the boats, and husband or none, and one, heart-broken| Be sure to obtain ‘‘Allock’s” Porous | fails in practice,because deleterious gases | when fishin’ a leather strap is kept above The occupants of a house must therefore | cently. ‘‘Fish caught?’ questioned the never expect any scheme of ventilation to |reporter. *‘Wall it’s this 'ere way,” ex- run itself without attention on their glninad the turtler. “The catchin’s all writen: **An xonbrable Man, Fine Success. Wonderful Cures.”—Hours. R 0 5 PEBF!?NGTION And your work is done for all time Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using *CHARTER OAK 5 _ e heas Stoves.and Ranges, septuagenarian possessed of only seven | Plaster, as all others are worthless imi- | are often generated in quantities so large | the tail, with a loop in it for a line, § o sight macifal pasinors declarod with tations, that the fresh air supplied is insufticient Ev;ryg»'ins shipahiape: we skulls along, i WTd WIRE GAUZE OVER DB80Ru y:-:g wife in add nn‘ heo“knt::r” no; How a Father Learned to Avpreciate o Mppors Bis, e o “p’oum:io::: rl: v:: ;‘;ok:d?):t:r tl:; fish, :;:l’glllx? i: t‘o‘:.:el; to produce a more durable material [Whers to look for the same, Evidonce His Son, syooges Ay i Fer sale by rove that this system was the only cor- [ overboard, and seein’ his old friend, off for street pavement than the |abounds that this abnormal and obnoxious | Wil Strest Datly News Foot ono to use ina houss. Thoair mustbe |he goes and fastons onter it,and then the . . X Sioux Falls Granite. institution has passod its heydey and “I didn't use to believe nothin’ in ed- | forced through the house as through the |turtle ishauled in, and he ain't hurted a MILTONROGERS & SONS, f in the sore and yellow leaf. Tbe climax | decashun,” he said.as he heaved a sigh | workings of a mine; every external open- | bit.” YMAHA OBDE B‘S of the abominable was reached twenty- |like the whoeze of a sick horse, ‘“My |ing must b kept closed, and internalfp .. ————=mw———"r = I five years ago when polygamy was the |boy Dan'l, he got hold of books and |doors that lead from a room where the e .Menul l,:;,é’,, AP e it taple of exhortation and command. Now | things, and branched out as 3 geologist. | draft is in one direction to another where| p o0 A n Ony New York, sa M. HEIIIIm & 00. ’ “ . [FORJANYJAMOUNTROF itis held to be only for the fow, the NHe gotao he could talk of siratas, and |it is resorved must be closed the instant | ¢y 0™ G BRCLLIE! 4T ave Baen ene elite, tho chiefs; is the reward of special | formations, and belts, and dips, and in-|a person passes through them. There ° . virtue, and constitutes the badge of | discashuns, and one day he -rnl to me, illr)u» dou\l:t that so 19n§..me steam of l‘:fi:‘: misxfiuumy.':fl ts h'i?..';"?’l'{" ' aristooracy. The maximum of wives, t0o, | sez he: ‘Dad, there's a coal mino on our | air remained pure in quality and sufficient [ '*0¥ th" i .:1:' eyl H grows steadily less. Onve ten or fifteen |land.’” *“How d’ye know?” sez I *T've |in quantity a house would by this means | % "“:'h"‘ l? ;‘;:‘t“‘“ l‘" out 3‘1:;"? TS RGY MhoRAON b mavw, $hres or | neos ooted and found indications.” That | bo eficiontly ventilated. = But ‘the suc- GUDE B0 aadions napaR, Ao - our are sufficient to enable ove whole hi uck full of coal. And | cess of sucl tem wou! no coms: | dispe 1 COR. 13Th rise and reign in the eternal worlds. The | that hull 'tater patch is full of weeds,” | pensation for the lous of windows and i ki s Il 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE female fashions of the times make it im-|sez I, *‘You see I sold short on geology | doors that could be opened at pleasure, Arkansaw Politeness, OMAWA. possible to clothe so many, and the set- | and went long on ’taters, and missed it. | and for the absence of freedom to pass | Arkausaw Traveller. tled judgment of Christendom makes it- | One day a stranger with a squint in his | and repass in any direction at will. A correspondent of a Toled: has Y self folt more and more. No doubt, | oye cum along und offered n‘:‘: 8800 ’l‘heplimplutymodo of changing the | been nrucl‘: bly Arkomn pglieu:m[.wr'l‘hi‘ P' Bo ER & co" MACADAM] though, polygamy will continue to be|my land, and away she went. '— | air, that by doors and windows, can be | should cause no astomishment, for, as a En:lsud for years. In spite of the K o alf i rendered much more efficient than it is. | class, the Arkansaw people rank high PRALEDS, B . unds bill the endowment house week | ‘ars wurth of coal out o' hill, an i Movable transom lights over the door are | among the most polite ‘‘tolks” of 'in ] k ) filled promptly. Samples sent and P‘y week receives gucl‘:' a8 desire to be [ reached the middle yet. Dan'l wasright |a groat assistance, They should never|world. Some time age a gentleman came s a e an mp y imates given upon application. 'sealed for evernity. And this will |and T was a fule.” **And now?’ “Waal, | be omitted from the bedrooms, since they | to Arkansaw for the p of “‘writing not cease so long as women, all things| ¥’ mule team for a living, and | allow a change of air without admitting | up” its crudities. ©On hilp stand- | WM. MGBAIN & CO, | conaidered, profor pural o' singlo muae- | all tho indicstions Daw'l kin ind 5o the | the chilly breath of tho sarly morm. A |ing ‘on & small stream. s native came FIRE AND BURGLAR FROOF * |effect that Iorter besent to s lunatic|good method of obtaining fresh airin a |along and asked: “Whut yer doin’ pod- . ringes, o Sioux Falls. Dakota. h"ho situationin Utah steadily improves, | asyl room unprovided with a ventilating flue, mussrat?”’ “No.” *“Got ; has changed vastly for the better within e ——— is to raise the lower sash a few inches, | yer eye on a snake o' suthin’ I reckon?” DISEASES OF THE surl The nadir was A Pleasant Acknowledgment. and stop the lower aperture with a board | #“No, I haven't. 6o on away, I am try- reached uring the o ‘“Had sour stomach and miserablo appetite | mado to fit, The outside air, warmed by | ing to catch an idea and don’t wani to be dreadful *‘reformation, 4 le | for months, “‘m" thin every day. 1 used | gontact with the warmer air of the room, | bothered.” *‘¥er mout ketch a fow fish ) d ) ) » of terror, when L“fl:f,ffi’:‘mifimfafiffi‘:;m: will flow between the sashes and rise to- |ef yer wuster try right hard, but I don't I "y 0 Y 1020 ' F arnani Street,. Omah J, T. ARMSTRONG, N. D, | iiocasiomemsons” was n vogus aud| "0 Fo Siont vendor, * Thg. rsnght |l o tnuh sy s bl | Oculist land Awurist.|spostates and other foes were “‘used up” Flower Makery in Paris, is usually upward even Wl blo fur ketching| O M. LEIGHTON. H. T, CLARKY, ou've got the bait s aro from vesult of fire, om | by the hundred at the command of Pall Mall Budget. there is no fire, and is always so when a Ll.ou." The writer was a very impulsive . 3 6, Crelghton Blook 15tk | priesthood. i 1t seems almoat incredible that in Paris | fire is burning. A valve near the oeiling | man, and quickly deciding that the . Il: EIO LA-RKE ush no fewer than 80,000 women find their | opening inmK the flue gives a simple -onv'm{l 'fell%w ndd-d ch:“h'umnl, he "G N & c 4 1 S living by making artificial . " h ing rid of the hot foul air [said: *If I could there I fl.wm{l’flflnflmflflfl. concerned in those excesses pall filzg‘dflm uum‘:i',.l:; a m: 3.3 n‘l.fi% oln'. room. Bowb“: thrash you, my li::k 01:;1“. Ig admwirer, ) s to bo real artists, imi- | device as useful though it is when |troubde ‘bout that,” replied the mative, ; m up permanent quarters at Camp | tating nature almost to perfection with | there is tem of heati by |and, rolling & log into the s T Paper 0o, o Bt cinh Sl Zriat et i et o ek st 1y kot » e, b i, , A ‘.‘. North Maln l.luhdt ty in %mhu soon followed | nation. The rose in the workshop of the | is supplied by flues, or when steam heat | him and conducted him safely to the ‘ (1 FRABAIA PRsLEm L} SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) 0] ux of gentiles. Hlouriste is the masterpiece. 1f ‘the art |is employed, as in either of these cases |other bank. ~Oh, yes, the people of his ; A wime railroad ploted, bring- | of making & roso ia required, the maker i | the wari fresh air will at onoe escape by |state are polite. y P f “}’ AP 'R.'{ supposed to be able to imitate any other | the valve, So long asa fire is kept burn- e — 7 ; tho | flower, the rose belng cousidered as par- | ing in an open freplace there 1s little) Durkee's Salad Dressing—A ready- —DEALERS IN— TRy ticularly &g:'vdo&mghfimmmmfion 3: m:l“ lm"m fear of want of v:;:llhuuh. im::i;. rwihmddoliui:\:; dressing h\',;'" i o oung artists, As in other branches of {and no house can be consid to be [sa of meats, fish or vegetables. adustey, thero aro specialista in the Sower | perfostly ventilstod usloss well providod ! Oheaper and infiniiely botter thay home: Paints. Oils. Brushes. Clasg. ' \ factorios, the buds, the folisge and flnlvith fireplaces, A pivoted sash orjmade. Unrivalled as a sauce. 1 OMAHA ‘13750374