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PR TNPORTANT ARRESTS MADE. | Lancaster's Steriff C Ohute, Charged Wi ptures 8¢ W b Embe QUIET AND SUCCESSFUL WORK. Auditc ing ing ¢ atracts for Supplies ate Capital Nows. Babeock Makes an Account nd Turns Over Fees - Award- Lin prised to know tl tles A, € wre wanted in this city wart and e cherge of embezzlement 0.000. The sheriff de nd the to the tuns parted on s mission quictly work has heen done with commendable sucrecy, so commendable, in fact, that at 10 o'clock last taght the sheriff arrived with his prisoners and the public at large se. Some weeks came to stigating niay now know of the ca #ince Mr. W, 8. Fox, of Chicag the city, and as special iny agent of the company part of the Stewart & Chute Lumber company, began (o un- awrth matters that I lain dorm sinee Stewart & Chute <old Jumber yard in this place to Mr. Buek In the haleyon days ot the Stewart Chate& Lumber company the two par: ties named in the firm lived and moved in the higher cireles here, and to all ap- pearances had wealth to use and to spar wteverything moved smoothly on until the was made and the Chic louse, which presumably v pany in this local company, be, ngure up the assets, Then these dis- co veries wer de that lead to fasten ing the charze of embezzlement upon Stewart and Chute in the sum as before stated of §50,000. It 18 some thirteen months since these parties departed from the city, so when developments were nmade, showing they were wanted war- rant was issucd in‘the county court and placed in the hands of the sherifl, Know- g them to be in Chicago and Detroit, the district attorney came by telegraph request tothe city, requisition papers on the governors of Hlinois and Michigan woere obtained and on Sunday Iast the sherift departed in search of his game. In those oflicial cireles which knew of the pursuit, it be was enroute home with one or botn of the purti nd an interesting fight incourt will be the final sequel, and the Bee wili be there for the facts in the c THE AUDITOR PAYS OVER. Yester July 1, the state auditor filed hus report of fecs colleoted during the past six months, and turned over to the treasurer of state the revenue arising from his oflice for that period, The fees collected under theinsy aw for the time named amounted to $12,731, and the fees for registering bonds, cte., amounted to $' 204, making a total revenue for the six months ot $14,028, an index of ro wholesale the com: s, the growth of the r S in the auditor’s oflice, a bit of comparison will be an illustration. The above receipts, in amount $14,028, cover six months of the pres ar, and the total receipts from the same sources in 1855 woere $13,- making the six months receipts er than those of the entire year At this rate of growth and in- ase in the fees of the auditor, if that cial continues to act as treasurer of < +the fund for six months at a stretch, it would not be inappropriate to designate that oflicial as the assistant treasurer and purchase a new strong box for the receptacle of funds, Another point ul] interest in the growth of business i the anditor’s office is illus- trated in the fact that the oflice is more than _self-sustaining, the fees recerved Iargely overbalancing the expenditu The legislative appropriation for the two years ending the coming_winter amount $17,650, and it will be noted that the six months’ receipts for the first half of 1886 aggregates :{l.nen, or nearly the equal of the appropriation for the term, AS the state grows and increases, as in. surance companies multiply and bonded debts increase, so will the business of the auditor’s oflice increase in business done, money handled, and in responsibility be: tween the official and the publie, which will make an exact and literal interpre tation of the law the only thornless path inwhich to walk 1 th discharge of strict and exacting public duties. AWARDING SUP L] The board of supplies for state institu- tions, consisting of the governor, st treasurer, secrctary of state,attorney gen- eral and commissioner of lands and build- ings, held a meeting yesterday to award the contract for furmshing groceries, fuel, medicines, ht, ete., Lo the different staté institutions, including the state hos- Rll:ll for the insane, the blind asylum at iraska City, the reform school ut Kear- ney, and the deaf and dumb institute at Omaha, There w between forty-fiv and fifty different bids to be examined and compared, and a member of the beard made the statement that the eom- petition brought the cost price of articles advertised for down to good wholesale {:\h‘s that were aceepted and filled to the otter. BANK OF SYRACUSE, Articles of incorporation of the Bank of Syracuse were filed with the secretary of state yesterday, the articles placing the commencement of the corporation at June 9, 1886, with a twenty-year time to run. The eapital stock ‘is fixed at 30,000, divided into 300 shares of $100 cuch, and the articles ailow the eapital stock to be increased if desired to $100,- 000. The names of prominent citizens of Syracuse attached as incorporators aro Louis Hoebel, O'Horne, Hans Larsen, M Denuis, P. W, Risser, Josiah Rodge Alll[‘rlh Hubbard, J. . Arends, Amos A. Weller. THE CORONER'S JURY in the Melnter child murder case, after aday's work in viewing tho doctors bolding an inquest over the remains of the Little child put in the entire day yes- tercay hearing the physicians testify in rogard to the point to he decided by the autopsy, aud ut a late hour the evidence Wis not in so that a verdict by the jury could be reached. It is stated that the post mortem revealed one fact and t was th there was no organic disease from which the child suffered, and that the attempts to dofend on that ground were without foundation SENATOR VAN WYCK, 1l bo tound by ring un inter- view at Opelt’s hotel. There are a goodly nuwber of the neral’s friends und ad- mirers who are not limited in residence to Laneaster county, who have tak vantage to time their visit to the city 8s to 1 v et the senator in friendly greet- ing encral Van Wyck will to in Omauha a short time to-day previous to ty km}g the train for Columbus, where his fivst Fourth of July specch is to be de livored. ITEMS. Tho fail record shows 8 case of arrest the otlier day and .which stipvlated that the party in question was bailed out by Governor Dawes. There has been no appearance mude as yet in the case. Philip Gammell, who has been roaw around with a starand club as a lpu"fi Palleeuu\n. has heen suspended by Act- ing Mayor Brock and notice to that efleet served upon him by Marshal Beach. Ouly two cases of the usual complaint were up for hearing in the police court B THE _OMAHA DAILY BER: FRIDAY, STOREHOUSES OF WEALTH. The Golden Vaults of the Rothohsili's and Millions Therein, the nsual fines and e ) ngainst the vagrants The Wells-Fargo Express company has vacated office will th a storeroom | ont th Lincoln and Crete on Chantanqua days rtunity for MAMMON'S PAMPERED pportunity to re- | The Pillars Empires and t mateh with Omaha Monday to defeat the t appear to be unar Finance-The Puny Piles of Other Notables, il train of six Wagner coach Some time he Trafalgar Square riot yesterday en | foreboding of a revolution similar to that which brovght Louis XVI.to the guillotine block, combined with an Irish ice Cochran's court ty who had trou garments was sued verdict rendered for plaintift July orator: at the head ¢ large a fund the pend upon his house for in case such government Attorney Caldwell to Holdrege, to Waverly, Wilson Postmaster \ Mr. Lambertson plied, after a moment’s thought, *Fifty million pounds in twenty hundred milli | kins to Junia The following Nebraskans registered means §1,200,000,000 in that . David City; for it would drain 1 money centers of Burope of But this would They wonld, through Paris, Vienna, and Frankfort, by selling that amount of aise the fund and let on deposit in the banks of those citics to the government a [ neided, which would he paid out nearly nd the fund would low back to where it was raised throu, nuels of trade, prec raised the billion indel to Germany without er ance in the financial world. I'he wealth of the Rothschilds is phe- ) A gentleman who_is person- inted with the members of the me the following detals: nel Rothsehild, son of Nathan, London house, Omaha; George H all their ready ¢ be exaetly the e it MeMasters, Pawnee he extensive ing, Beatriec; B E. Cuthbert, Murtin, Wymor Roberts, David City; C . W. White, Hastings; as received A. Whipple, sheame, when the sale A BRIDAL COUPLE ON A TOUR. Jehaved on a R Train, and the Indignation They m to M. Quad in Detroit Free Press: what's the use of married and go off on a bri When a couple & the founder of al tour why Baron Alphonse Rothschild, son of J the founder house, had inherited between them Lord Lionel had for have through their fons and by playi by every man fresh fishy” How silly the i to them when they period of six months in love, and are we $150,000,000. vast business ope into each other's combined wealth to $600,000,000 or more. The other members of the family, cousins 1d who have ehar, Are we fools when idiots when we ma The couple T hay in tho middle of the and he was her: of these two, fabulously wes and the entire tanily are worth probably in the neighborhood would no longer set the dog on him or around the gate. didn’t show the least disposition to jump out of the car window, but all of a sud- den he grabbed her by the paw. Then he leaned over ngle of 45°, and she fell towa v uncomfortable position, ntained it with searcely any rot skewed ume known that the sherift’ Baron Rothschild, are just as much im- mersed in business as though their living depended upon it. The amount of busi- grabbed back. They own the entire quick- silver and copper’ mines in Spain, a num- aluable patents which the; operating, and now they are end 5bble up the oil fields of Russ in adidtion to th; It was a ve but they m: ange for hours, around almost hindside befo would not rele go through the roof. rimmense stock a corps of scien- tilic, mechanical, enginearing, accountants under pay K ([ linvestment fullv and thoroughly investigated or sub- mitted to a coun suggestions. so her cluteh for foar he'd His collar wilted tie worked around under his ar, but if he let go of her paw she'd “Darling?” said he in a per, “doesn 't it seem funny “Ican't realizo she raked one of her back hair) bullfrog whis- for adyisement it,’" she answ making ten, or & hundred thousand pounds or more th prove the opportunit; ter over to the proper expert, who makes “All mine?'’ “Yos, lovey.” Never get mad “Never, sweete, The man on the seat behind them fol- ded up the paper, picked up his grip, and changed o a seat actoss the aisle. sat down a motherly-looking woman in- and turn the mat- which report is turned over to a supervis- amination; and a made to the Hundreds of experts condenscd final report i heads of the house. and clerks are on their pi Such is the great business ma wonderful hou ‘“*Are they married?" L think so, madam.” *‘And can nothing be done to stop it?” “I think not.” For two or three minutes the newly- were silent. rling!” she suddenly sighed. it, my angel? othschild, deseribed to me his first view he had with him. the forenoon and found the anty : government, all waiting thei view with the informant s groat financial mogul, My ceeded, through the help of one who was near the throne, m gaining ninterview without having 'to wai baron seated at his desk with a pile of papers in tront. He was a small unassuming dressed rather plainly, wit necktie, and wearing a plain gold ring on one of his fingers, which was all the jewelry he had on h the last man to be “What is it? If any base hyena has d_to cause you a moment's unh: ness DIl murder Point out the It isn't that,'’ *“Then what,” “I'm—I'm afraid yow'll be—mad '’ How coula I be mad at s it, Dollys” “Why, L wish yowd wipe the sweat out of that left ear. Now, you love me just the same don't you?” “Of course.” “And you ain’t mad?" “Why, no. : who's looking? “No, I won't, and companionable, so o speak. the baron was engaged in conve now--who cares 1t’s nobody’s business, ty minutes, he would be rupted by ' cl iving the last que whom he would here was another inter during which she whether they were en; 1l of silence, ion on the ticker to ged the week be- nry the boot or whether it was the next Sunday after. elling with surprising his conversa- as though nothing oceur- Really he is king in the then resume “What, angel " A > we wonlly married?” adio inanss his work of rolling up his coloss like an immeu though his Hebrew house would never rest contented till they owned the whole To show the foresight of the n, he has evervthing in readiness so revolution should break out It looks as { you love mo?" ‘With all my b o ain’t mad?” “Then D'm so happy! Harry, squee: stocks, securi- We held an indig) er valuables can meoting and appointed a committee to see if something could not be done; but squoze the harder. o or four women got together and passed a resolution to the effect that if a vailroad company would not passengers the legis led to, but but th ties, and books, and oth sported to either | He has a special ironclad car fitted up 1 constant readi- evolutionary convulsion, vod in safes to the ear, pro- ure should be ap- | vided with armed guards, and whi t couple had a death ) on each other and wouldn't let go, The baggageman came in when sent for, but he said he was helpless. He knew just how we must feel, wasn't o blame. back to the car and ask it up against him, had been out of a job for several month: and this was his first run. Well. the long and short of the matter s that cighteen 150 miles with that pano, thing will ueyer happen agai We shook hands ou that and agreed we'd that attempted " 1871 should occur and had not been adonted, that but the rond ; : The conductor came us not to lay sppened to be in Paris would go to [ #4¥ weaith of the family is the result of about s’ accumulations, com- mencing with the grandfather, Anselm Meyer Rothsehild, Many of the r ave heard the story how N one hundred na, but such a than Roths- child managed to obtain the news of the result of the battle of Waterloo mmne hours before the British government had received it. around Wellington's army the result of the it hanging e ——— 1 ] As soon as Ls in Ashen. July 1—Miller Lawrence’s tub and pail shop burned this fight, the fun ove grim monster Wrong. He proposes im- s in waiting, which ch, where a ho; which was relieyod fresh horse, and he re: morning of the second day after the battl The news that b ‘The firin had large stock of goods r very few miles by a Bono Publico, ni}a retired three shed London the “let montiest, says:, Josed improverbont, regardless of cost.” eived of Bon- z crossed the Belgium front- t Wellington and Blucl Quatre Bras and Ligny, of Wellington ting to Waterloo, and him, looked badly the junitor at the blind a grumbles about iseless expense, and finally d of constant re; written on r old meat-market ledger, w ically on both sides with light blue ink myude of bluing and cold tea. introduces, der the cumstances, such crude yet orlg ary gems us ved in the (-iliy yesterday ‘noon and | those aparte ivllowin and created stock board, which the grave look purposcly put on by Roth- 1d as he app od a thrown on to the shrewd Israelite through bis confidential brokers. During evening the news of the vietory 00 was received and consols made atest jump in pr and f; s that ever stock market, and Roths- child made His e thougnt as it is the for fragments of his old school deelame tions to ride on. steamships, MUST PEFEQT MADE ad no more advantuge than the Propared with spoctal reyard 10 heahh. No Ammoila, Lime or Al PRICE BAKING POWDER CO., The wealth of the Va estimated at about §200, Astor fumily, $200,000,000; of the Stewart Jay Gould, derbilt family is 00,000; of the $200 000,000; £100,000,000; of of consisting of Mackey Hopkin ood, O'Briens, Fair, Share £200,000,0 1 grand tot 0,000, " Yet the Rothehild family ckefeller, Huntington, Muls, includir American millionair L have a hundred millions or more feft I'he next wealthiest man in Er after Lord Rothschild is the D Westminster, 'His income is rat a nea amin wiich would amoun @ year to £2,630,000, almost entirely de rived from rentals situated in the heart of London. His wealth eannot equal that of the late William H. Vanderbilt, whose | yeariy income ranged hetween £10,000,000 and 20,000,000 England has a' larger | number of wealthy men, however, wh incomes are amillion and upwards than | Amer has. Napoleon scornfully re marked that E a nation ot hopkeepers. More properly speaking she is nation ~ of shopkeene great mer- chants, manufactur nd ship owner: and she is literally the workshop of tl world as well as the financial and com mercial center, Her gre therefore, is simply in the ace ereasing at the rate £600,000,000 year, being the net profit of all her in- dust existing the ing profitable the gre the vas on. Hence it is that her such foolish investments in the bonds Egypt, Turkey, Honduras, Mexi Poru, and other bankrupt nations ) d confede umu e late decea rate of he years she will . Atthe pre sparc cash isa problem hard to solve. g tesia WRITING FOR THE PAPERS. What the Publie Owes to 'V and His Numerous Co-Workers Who Conceal their Identity. Bill Nye in Chie is Veritas. T writ quite an old r words of advice am th ing star of the American news point out the proper course for a elected member of congress a thoughtless editor the ple. 1 write on the subject of po! or the press for ye tical cconomy. Also on both sides of the paper. Sometimes [ write on both sides Vien [ do so 1 write ame of Tax-Payer, but my real of the question, over the name is Ve itas Iam the man who first suggested the culvert at the Jim strect crossing, so that the water would run oft toward the pound after a rain. With my ready pen —ready, and trenchant as [ may say—L I in my poor, sug- gosted a great many things which’ might otherwise unsuggested. Lam the man who annus a celebration of the fourth of little town, and asks for some cutionists 10 be seted by i whose duty it shall be to r tion of independence in a ‘e, reninined for many y young elo- the com L the hrill voice to those who yearn to be thrilled through and through with patriotism. DidT not speak tirough the columns of the press in clarion tones fora proper observance of our mation’s great natal day in large gothie extended ecaps, the nation’s starry banner would rer furled and the greased pig w tinue to erouch in his lair, With the of my genial co-workers, Tax-pay Settler, Old Subseriber, Constant Retuler, U. L, See, Fair Play, and Mr, Pro Bono Pubiico, I have maide the world a_ more desirable place in which to live than it would otherwise have been My co-laborer Mr. Tax-Payer is an old contributor to the paper, but he is not really a tax-payer. He tses this signa ture in order to conceal his identity, just asT use the name Veritus. We have s great deal of fun over th annual reunions where we talk about all of our aftairs. Old Settler is a young tenderfoot who ue here lust spring and tried to obtain ing an lmlua‘(ruuubhi a livelihood by s lamp chimney. He did well for sev weeks by going to the diferent res dences and throwing one of his glass chimneys on the floor with considerable force to show that it would not break. He did a good business till one day ho made a mistake. Instead of getting hold of his exhibition chimney, he picked out one of his stock and busted it beyond recognition, Since that he has been ‘writ- ing articles in violet ink relati to old times and publishing them over the sig- nature of Old Settler, Old Suoscriber is a friend of mine who ads his paper at the hotels while wait- ing for a gratuitous drink. Kair Play is ired monte man and Pro Bono Pub- lico is our genial and urbane undertaker, Iam a very prohfle writer, but all my work is not printed. A venal and cor- rupt press at times hesitates about giving curreney to such fearless, earnest truths as [ make use of. Iam also the man who says brave things in the columns of the papers when the editor himself does not dare to say them beeause he is afraid he will be killed. But what recks Veritas the bold and free? Does he tlinch or quail? Not a flinch; not a quail, Boldly he flings aside his base fears, and with bitter vituperation he assails those he dislikes, and attacks with re- sounding blows his own personal ene- mies, fearlessly signing his nume, Veritas, to the article, 5o that those who yearn to Kill bim may know just who he is. What would the world do without Ver- itas? In the hands of a horde of journal- ts who have nothing to do but attend to their business, left with no anonymous friend to whom they 1 fly wheén mo- mentous oceasions arise, when the sound ce and betier judgment of an outside friend is need their econdition would indeed be a pitable one. But he will never desert us, He is ever at hand, prompt to say, over his nom de plume, what he might hesitate to say over his own name, for fear that he might go with & batt eye and a nose like a vol under each nic eraption. of Gettysbur He cheerfully rattacks everything and everybody, and, thén goes a till the 1, and " the libel suit are the Then ho teturns and as and the following weck a ¢ comtéd from Taxpayer. Pro card- us have the pro- Hrovem bitter hen the eynical U. L. See (who is r ly yluni) aws out from the teeming brain ler . long, flabby ossay, d-ruled leaves, eut out of an tten cconom This essay @ most trying eir- ! liter- Wad some power the giftie gic us, ete. He also says ho wee sma’ hours ayant the twal, rther on Breathes there a man with soul so dead Who never to himselt hath said, ete, say is not so much the vehicle of ccommodation train But to Veritas we owe much. Isay this because I know what I am talking about, for am 1 not old Ve Hav paper, ever since paper; Aw 1 not the mun whe for years has been (a3 himself t 1 been writing things for the 7ere published? JULY 2. 230,000,000, ! o several California millionaires, {*toes i _the deep reces: while the editor _remained at the office and took the credit for writing what I had given him for nothing® Has not many a paper built up a name and a l:bel snit ¢ written, and yet [am aimost unknown? When people ask, all of its members, could buy nd of | overworked costume land was simply | 1 beg le alth, ! ions for hundreds of years, and is now in- | and commercial enternrises, This will explain the low rate of interest and the difficulty of find- nd safe investments for [ months ago surplus which is the result of ceumulations constantly going papitalists make of | , as | well as her investment in the bonds of the it tions, in twenty-five seumulated fifteen thousand millions more of wealth, and how she wil be able to invest all her | Queen’s Theater at Manchest | where the brothers were ritas' They w 1y from News: My name for the papers. Lam nd nave written kindly rs, 1 friend of the publie and the guid- or 1 newly nd show the its of the peo- cateh o rope Othe an net. This resulted alaw forbidding b without a net. 'The brothers followed the army and gave tent per- formances during the war. In th latter part of 1 ing died of insanity, scident, the remaining s, where they played for . They remained abroad until 1881, when the came with that performance to the Pa theatre, this city. the country followed Fantasma i George went s July in our Rus: pencil. Los Angeles. States and probably in Americ possession of the William Penn Hose Company, of Philadelphia. feet 8 inches long, 1foot 8 inches wide and 1 foot 8 inches deop, solid blocks of wood, 1 foot 8 inches in diameter and about 4 inches thick. The cylinders are 4} inches in diameter, with a stroke of 6} inches. The internal con- struction is the same as in the hand engines of the present day, with air chamber, waterway and suction. is no maker's name on it, but it was built 'bY cither Newsham or Fowke,of London. The engine was accepted by the com- pany in Salem, April 2, 1749, and the company took the name of the Union It was kept in use 9, a half contury of active whean one called the Essex took Engine "Company. until April, 17 seryi its place. blackballed by the Pa still the satisfa can exhibit to foreig ]u-lrlwrl and beautiful home—archit ally hibition sights of Fifth avenue, New York, and no day passes that strangers do not walk slowly past it and ba again, admiring the exqul ship of its exterior. Its be notable in an ample hall, with its wainscoting of Caen stone overhung with old Ita cal dome abov unri In style it marks the transition between the time of Louis XIV and Louis XV, The wood of the room was the spoil of a dismantled chateau of ancient date, and its ornamentation is o between doors and windows se filled with antique Gobelin ta hight the pre wood, le: painted abroad. The banqueting of the style of Francis I, is 54 fee and is two stories in heighth. On' the north wall is_a colos br the entranc window, 6 f which contains the much dow by Oudinot. The subject meeting of Henry VI and F the Field of the Cloth of Gold, and makes jeet is continued i windows t below the ¢ men hints of a elder Vanderbilt—the leonine commo dore—never dreamed. Indeed the present Vanderbilt hoys were run- ning around their father's farm at N | Dorp, Staten Is chins 'of the days they had neithe anything of the twenty or twen: founder, Jean Gobelin state purchased its b the needle s 18886, a stranger to fear® Have I not again and again called the eongrossmen, the capi | talist, tho clergymen. the voter, and the lay | philant my tor ropist everything §1 cou upon what I hs who is Veritas and where does he live no one seems to know. He is up seven flights of stairs in a hot room that smells | of old clothes and neglected thoughts Far from the “madding throng, Constant Reader has <o truly said, I alone, with no personal property bt truth, and a shawl strap ful tions to the over-estimated edits the paper So I battle on, with only the meager and flea-bitten reward of sceing my | name in print “anon,’ as Constant Reader would say Ail 1 have to fork which over to posterity is my good nam ve to sign here VERITAS, DEATH OF AL‘FRED‘ HANLON Another of the Famous Family of Acrobats Gone. Angles county, Cal., wher n account of sickng Alfied Hanlon, one of the fami famous acrobats, He died of consamp- tion on Thursc 1 v t the age of 44 v is carcer was full of excitement ril. From a very early age he public performances with hi Indeed, it was one of the f: uons that his father, who ter R his mother, who was an actress, u take the boys on the stage when they ‘e babies, instead of emploving stuffed article. After appearing at the London Adelphia Alfred joinea his older brothers, George and Wilham, and made atour of the world with an instructos teen years, and” then with the b n aring th 1 1860, rting from Cali g part of South BI'1C and then went to rope, re turning here in 1865, They appeared at Pavis during the exposition of 1867, At Buftalo in 1863 Alfred fell wi - was usly hurt. + dangerous aceidents, which hard ¢ of the hrothers eseaped, led th at Tamn s hall, to put up a safet 184 59, one of the brothe: homas) ha ought on by went to P long time in Le Voyu 0 en Suiss to their | v died last April at ) Alfred’s poor health detamed him here. He re ned until this spring at the home that the brothers provided for their mother, on Orange mountain, where she yet lives. Alfred leaves a danghter. He was an accomplished Iinguist and spoke fluently French, German, Spani . He was skillful also with his The body will be buried near — re eng The oldest A BEAUTIFUL HOME. That Mr. W of Willam K, Vanderbilt, liam K. Vanderh though eion visitors the most etur- n this country. It isone of the ex- k ite workman- rterior would The high, countr ) ombroid- s coiling of old carved ouk, ends rways of stone earried to the verti- The drawing-room is side of the Atlantio, wled on th solid earvings. Of the eight panels n stry in tints, which harmonize with ailing cream and gold of the The eighth panel contams a fuil- h portrait of Mrs. Vanderbilt, room, by 35, oseat I mantel 21 fect sing tothe ceiling. Opposite from the main hall is'a bay ot deep and 20 feet ed-of win- ad and neis I on picture twenty fe I'he sub- oze of the at run all around the room iling. > are but speci- ice of which the when nd, elad like other ur period, attending the dis- ot sehool and going crabbing on hol seen or heard of kind. That was only y-five yeurs ago, and (o boys have learnéd the” art of spending money without any trouble ne ghort- sighted people blame them for what they ¢ pleased to eall extravagance, but if they would spend still more of their mil! jons o encu n manner that labor would reap the result it d be a publie gain " - - The Gobelins w ent site, ne. exeouted with ndid specimens of o id tapestry. Some of the piee is, in 1662, Here ar 23 of work have cost as much as 30,000, re- | quiring th The building, loos, and many picces of tapestry w n 1871, Here were o and carpets which adorn the various D royal fore wbor of five ox n years mmune ade the tapestrics re destroyed by the cos, that have been presented to guers, PUBLIC OFFICE IN. IRELAND. | thesn fants togxtet of 8 afl consists of a secrotary and inspector | at £300 each and a clork at €200, | A Long List of Tat Borths Home Rulers, | will have to be of the swamp ng Salaries Paid to the s From Over the Channel Suppression Native History. elerk of recc tant ditto at €3%0; a clork of seal and a otk of entries at €250 oach, and num- A correspondent of from London, gives a oflices in Trel showing the enor the salaries s mons ofticial force agamst which the sup porters of home ru with in times past | tablishmeuts in Ireland » have had to contend | abundance of good slature comes the edn department Archbishop W Wt £550; three twelve second elerks at £800;an that the late rospectively; with the searcely veiled object of protest antizing the country and by this me sealing the unton until the present time, the institution has been governed by the domimant party ast decade a Catl on the board, just to show that the opinions of the vast majority of the people were not THE REGISTRAR GENERA is one that will of necessity come unaer the control of the new governing body. 1t s with the registration of births, mar- and deaths throughout the coun- nd honsts of & w York Times: Word has been re- ceived of the death at Pasadena, Los he went threo 5, of altogether ignored been but as a drop of wa £200; two inspectors ach; nomedieal superin superintendent taken §0 deep ar The genius of this system aspiration of th excluding from the sional elerks Ireland will text books all €100 i ddition to the Iatter Dublin the big centd sum the survevor Limerick were the cold cioud o ved a thousand y the_ battfe o y prominently s rves of the pupils land for four- pthiers, Thomas, Edward and Frederick, org: ized the troupe that made them all mous. They appeared_first in_ this country in Scptember, 18 and receive nume kshders to hook POST OFFICE, Which is the most popular departments, will, if the Irish anthoritie ous rewards for brir pended before t in the rank of poctic readings. In L was taught to shoot igland and to turn Niblo's, " i | short, the young i fter a tour of Gl ot in the direction of Imperial establishment and the control of the which are in the It will be rem from human nature, it somehow or other made a left wheel and trying to who was conv was its seeretary at the h Ireland is the where national history is forbidden to be taught in the publie schools cece, Turkey, Italy and other states be pursucd with impunity, but the n in includes a chiet clerk at €6 )i tive second cle hortly afterward in performances respectively; an inspe Expurgatorius of the commissiones government, changed, and the varying fortunes and cquered career of the 1 —and landlo i houschold words to the youthof Ircland To bring about such be something appr TING OFFICE with a controlle ) ntendents at £100; n - deputy first-class. clerks ching to a revolu- dircetorate, althongh it seems a pity to disturb the ngement which in- ident commissioner at £1,000 £750 each; an A successful tour of In 1884 they added t. Frederick and Lin July, 185, {0 pro- duce Le Voyage en Suisse ‘on the conti nent. Fred present felisitious i without whom the a year; two scerets between £180 sonly the stafl not for the institution of Christmus boxes ely exist on th they could ceed twenty shillings threadbare m the s fit for duty they are ¢ ol attaches to “he Thet a rovinces with salaries f a hundred of dis- s of from £300 s traveling jority of these held by men who admire the umon and denonnce in unsparing tempt to dismember of £600 each, and trict inspectors with xclusive of fir The great n h and ajority of ecivi home government will improve their un fortunate position and make some ) o- for their declining consummation dev 2 ne in the United isin_the terms the present glorious empir ¥ such good thing: forces operating finciples, it is steau, teachers whom the; range themselve; The tub is 8 i'he splendid fr against nationa The wheels are ntend should ide of the P: nding the nume run—such as censure, reat bulk of them have proclaimed their fealty to the *‘un- erowned king.” THE PRISONS will also be handed over to the new In many cases there is a little I will take Montjoy, sixty-seven There i3 a8 go rations and res| doctor at £300; a clerk at £130; a steward at £120; a chief £100; twelve warde: s_which they dismissal, ete.—the Thero army of oflicials. which several Fenians we ernor with £300 a year, pike Island in Cork harbor there i 8 governor at £450 a year; Protestant cha club, has | €500, a steward at £100; besides M. A. Disniow. tion of knowing that he the famous mond prison, from which ames Stephensonso mysteri- zled” in spite of the combincd 1. A DISBROW & C0. Wholesale Manufucturers at £100; a chief w. c100; a schoolmaster 305 a clerk af hese officials in order takes two in- spectors at £1,000 each, who are assisted by a clerk at £450. THE REGISTRY OF DEEDS is another important Irigh department which was until recently in the patron- age of the treasury, but'is now recruited through open cempetition. and assistant registrar enjoy salaries of 00 and £700 r chief clerk at £500 and an at £450, with numorous cle ranging from £100 to £400. THE DUBLIN METROPOLITAN POLIC are a body quite distinet from Irish constabulary and are undoer sepur- y are governed by two commissioners and i salaries of 2800 each departient is a recore two chief clerks at other clerks with s: The registrar There isa sistant chief ks at salaries at £1,500 a yea ries of from L All these ofticers will be in the gift of the native oar THE IRISH VALACE led the Foar Cou Office—218 South Fificenth st, ightoenth and lzayd s LINGOLN BUSINESS DIRECTORY Newly Furnishod . The Tremont, ERALD & SON, Propriotors, Commonly chief clerks at £500, at figures ranging T'he limbs of and numerous M oto £450 a y vo gencrally covered with w vich will hiave to be appl 1E REGISTRY OF JUDGMENTS J. H W, HAWKINS, Architect, 31, 34 and 42, Richards Block, Lt Neb, Elovator on lith street. ; vropriety there will be no need for the ANDED ¥STATE COURT, receives £1,000 1ts £300 and peak of keepers ceonntants ab s 10 judges at GALLOWAY CATILE. %0 respeetively, not to s ds,record clerks and three chief cler Hoom U, Biak erous junior clerkships. THE LUNATIC ASYLUM OFFICK | whatever king may r¢ s 50 ealicd from 31 The | , for lunaey o . s death and ofMea s ot present manned by two 2 2y i ) whi & chief elerks 0 and anothe Dundram asylum in the [ lin there is u governor at £400; a visiting physician at £175 | elerk at £100, bes pointments. rpet | M. lirauso, Lincolu, N 1 € M. Woo | Col¥. 0 : LOAN FUND 1 in Lineoln stop at ional Hotel, And gt @ g0od ainner for 250, J. A FEDAWAY, Pivp 3 Lo publi¢ bodies, such us eor- institotions, ments which will another of the dep. 5 st or be handed over to presont but whether its cmployes will condescentd to serve under have the of tho department on which the future alone can an- It has & judge is a 000 & year; a ohiof ds at £150; and £100 to tion of as - an chanr enjoys £1,400 A year; commissioners g £1,000 clerk ot £420; *hiteet £400 3005 valuator though £1.500. OFFICE at £1,000 a 300; three firsts €400, be and ocea- nted the power sent manned by fwo ch; hifteen laced undor ture majority the dominant bered that, until Cornwall, d of unnatural offenses ndsomo salary afl ks at £1,000 tor of 0; an H at £400 and several other clerks at salarios ra two ditto at £300; inspactor of and a large stafl SSeNEers THE IOOR LETTER CARRIERS, t office would ce: se to pertorm its indespensable functions, rked and worst pai nid tinted do not and is & utly to be wished. scoes of the Pantheon, pied the leading artists rs, nre already showing signs of injury from 'Tvices were held'in the Pantheon the constant Influx of fresh air and the warmth generated by wtions kept the interior toler- influence is with- drawn, steps must be taken to preserve the frescoes. When Beby waa sick, we gave her Caste:As, Whon aho was » Child, she cried for Castoria, ‘When she became Miss, she clang to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Caatorin, and Doalors in Doors, Blinds, Mouldings, ¥ine Hardwood Interior Finish, Counters, Pew Ends, Brackets, Seroll Work and Turnings, Building Paper. Window Frames in stock. 0ffica & Warerooms Cor. 42th & Izard Sts. Templeton & Wh ~Dealersin— HARD AND SOFT COAL AND W00D, Mantles, itney, Rock Springs, Hlinois, Missouri and Iowa Soft Coal, or Quy, Blreol cars from house to any part of the oity. oln, of Live Stock Auctioneer Golloway uud Bhort Horn bulls 104 s B. 1. GOULDIN Farm Loans and Insurance, oom |, Richurds Blo'k, Lin 5. ot fule