Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 8, 1886, Page 12

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12 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY AUGUST 1886.—-TWELVE PAGES ll PRETTY POETIC PICTURE. | whir nemneat o visne fo trmiorser a | THE NATURE OF COMPETITION | conut or keey i wmder my oo smmmes 1701 being among the Frietehie heirlooms diate supervision, and would thus be able This flag which Mrs. Handschue and b - to eftect_savings impossible to the large ‘ Whittier's ‘Parbara Fristchie” Turned by | daughter so religiously preserve is torn, | Particulatly That Practioed by the Man- | dealers who are obliged to rely on agents, the Facts InteBald Prose but the banner was not rent with seam 3 1 These small economics were to constis s Lo o and gash from a rifle bl Tt is torn— agers of Railroads: tutes my profits.”” With this in view he n only this and nothing more. That Mrs went south to the cotton regions, but ) ] EGEND. | Frictehie did mot wave the flag at Jack- | what was the resnlt? His ealeulations | M . . . BIMPLE ORIGIN OF THE LEGEND. | Frictehic (i not ave the llng o ively | RUINATION AND - ENRICHMENT. | Wil it it meaiements | 4 DAt the best five cent Cigar manufactured, is on sale in this affirms. The flag waving act was done. of cotton, wien he found that he :inul\l it b T'he Famous March of Lee “Over the | however, by Mrs, Mary S, Quantrell, an- | gpfendly Intercsts Built on the Dis- | not obtain the rebates given to the large Ci . He othor Fredorick woman, bitt dwekson took L ¥ P denlors, and was obliged to retire from : y by Me ”l‘l‘v:ll""l'“ :‘..u::::‘,n.;‘u .’..Iu B | tice OF 1% st an Jew; Cynnviteal) was (-nn::;u;...'. :"I:nlll :\m.l? Simil- th i id ot competition m_(,”;‘{_ of erick Town, : rate her deed, she nc beeame nomic Evil, :v:; it is confined to wen or a dozen u 11 0., 1 aall Oug &S. - amons 3 onse 2 - It is nsserted in favor of the pools, or Philad-iyhia Tim Quick, ni it fell from the brokoen staf BY RICHARD T. ELY, PROFESSC Ditme Barbarn snatehe | the silken searf, from the mendows rich w Cloar in the cool September mor e mmvon o momres o | hormeemenee o ot e ield &6 Farnsworth, 81186 Cuming st. She ) n the window-sill VERSITY shown that they do not affect the most Leplres of Fredorick stand And v with a royal will g PATER 1t notorious examples of diseriminations, by the hills of Maryland i S B o ST for and one of the shrewdest business men it \nrds b It Spare your country 8 g, she 4 . i - < . . . . LiyiliaUr o] Hadlndly HEVE Discriminations in railway ch the practice of railways during the ex b \ A ghade of &nlness, a blush of shame, mean a difference of treatment in or | istence of a pool thus: “If you go into Fatr as the enrded af the Lord Over thatace of the leader canie | of one party or thing and againstanother | a freight office, and maraene | W, J, Whitehouse, N, W. Cor. 16th and The nobloe nature within bim stirtod party or thing. They are of three prin- i\””"' ;.'v‘m':'ll‘! i 18 o very pretty picture Whittier | T01i% at that womnn € decd nnd word harty or thing. Lhey e of three PHB- | You niag nrgue and pload us fong as you B of tho sjotbt Macslanl town whioh i R cipal kinds, namely: fivst, between places, | i)l and enfarge upon_the Al amount M . f yon gray head for example, in favor of Boston and reigl 3 s poe “Barbara Frictehie” has ir 108 like A dog! March on'" he said A b, ave B of freight ou expect to send, :‘,:‘m,’l’::‘,i',‘:,, fnenentontly of iis nuso e e vinst New York, or in favor of New | and the advantages which will enster. eiations Frederick deserves to h Colonel Henry Kyd Douglas, who was | York and against Rochester; second, be- | accrue to the Iway from the pet to sing of its glustered spires and tell | with Gene Juckson nute tween thing in favor of wheat and | formation of a connection with you, but i o i e, s | nansae it Jefferson Square Drug Store, 16th and dant hills that” help to render it o | cle in the Century that o Only the third will be treated 1n this | my ol foir Mhccs sot faturesquo in their summer sheen, No | saw Barbara Frietehie and that Barbars ; y ‘o and discre fine who hus ‘evor soon thom can forgol : on. “T'his story is borne | place, as it is of chief importance from | tion can be trasted? Then it is a different jetchie’s relatives, the orchards of apple and peach that crown these Maryland hills. What a sight of loveliness, of uty and of temptation these orehards “fruited decp'’ . who [ a general economie standpoint. matter, You are taken aside into a little Ch g Bl | St th oty o s | oom e ot i el o e | U AL1CAGO, nCin her fidelity to the unjon | @Vl it 18 necessary to consider the nature | g 1o ve with contentment expressed on Is the well known must have presented “to the eyes of the When she saw the boys in gray | 0f competition, or the struggle for exis- | your sountenance,” This same gentleman famishod rebel horde” when Stonewall wrching by her house, she would shake | tence in the economic world, Men offer | informed me that he could not unde | Jackson's advance swept over the hill by r stick at them, and on one occasion | services or goods at varying rates, and how a certain Ch fealer could put the Union hospital and into the town on | she saidl to some of them who had taken | gach tries to underbid the other, and that | £00ds on the m vhich had been sup- -l——_m = the oOth of Sn:pli'nfln'r,‘lmi. '§uf1 r at !!;';(,';N,‘.“,’"‘,:.',r d(ilnw- front (:!n:\l\‘fn.l I\;:“x" a accepted which, all things consid- }‘illl::\lll.‘& ll‘llll‘l: :A{‘“:“("::fi:::‘l‘flu:“*“lz;l: lower B e porfont. Tt 1t bhiy when wa come | et off of iy porei. < lhe earest | ered is the lowest. Now this is not the | accident ho discovered tht. this f the ballad, Barbara her- | Y me to universal rule of business, but it is merchant ved a special ret rate, gelf, that the prosaic hand of fact sweeps ”I"-““- r_u;hi.vlusmn.\l'-h! ';"_I‘NL had | YOY general one, and in the great busi- _lh;- une uty mul.luf-qu ality of rate awiy the poetic creation of the singe e wavod it ot on tho Gth to | 0¢sS transactions of our time it prevails § Prodice in many quarters « “""‘r"gl" il ML AL Bavien . \ < the story h:,hl by Mrs. | these t otions are honest. The lar- | to a fecling of holplessnoss wnd prostra: (r'»;r‘:x‘nllhu"\ Qi o o Ueriugn Reformen | Abbott, Handséhto's — danghter: | gest number of exceptions may be found | tion. : ; cinieeh in Frederick is also true. A long | Jackson and his men had been in Fred- | the remuneration for personal sc s In speaking of railway charges and di 1ife had been hers. —Ten years older than | erick and loft a short, thne bafore. - We | but the foree of competition is indirectly | qriminations, At that ‘f}“: troops ¢ e My ,,,,t‘,',..,» nd 1| becoming more and more felt, and it is lived almost opposite aunt's place. She | inereasingly diflieult to e offe v Charles Adams, Jun,, said, in 18%0: “In & to these things 1 consider the existing ve from its | system near as uny system can the Declaration of Indc he had arnived at the full g it years when the foderal union was fc S TIvB o e B Tataishan and my mother's cousin lived together When Mill wrote histreatise on | be. Studying its operations, as I have ;l(:‘r[u' (Tll:lll]u\l‘l:ly?r.l:: Ber door with the | Her mame was Harriet Yoner. Mother cconomy, forty ro, he | Jong and patiently, Lam ready to repeat aunt and tell her av that custom, not competition, | now what I have rep aid before, shtened. You know that | fixed prices in retail trade. It is doubtful | that the most surprising thing about it most ninety-six years | if this ean now be said of that trade in [ tome is that the business community BAs i ok o1d, ol tmortality | 01d. When I reached aunt's” place she [ any of the large centresin Buarope or | sustains itself under such conditions.” emme to ber in 'the last year of her life, it Lvnv\\: a8 much as [did about matters and certainly not without serious nother abuse closely connected with as not undeserved, even if the inei- Cousin Harriet was with her. They were 0 n hloz‘\lln'()nllnum of | this is the management of railw for =m dents upon which it was based were not | on the front porch and aunt was leaning | things, such as the old political economy | the outside interests of manage strictly accurate, for her devotion to the | on the cane sho always cd. When | presupposed, there are ex t sides to | their friends. This takes at times 5 5 3 b g union continued to animate her while she the troops marched along aunt waved her | this competitive struggle, as it then gives [ precise form just deseribed. It (None genuine without Vallencia C had life. hand and cheer after cheer went up from | a stimulus to individual ini andac- | can be readily understood that the = i the men as they saw her. Someeven ran | tivity, each one trying to offer superior | interests of lway dircctor as into the yard. “*God bless you, old lady,’ | services or goods, ‘or endeavoring to de- i Uil LG O e O e L A D s L e ST b b A .YOII oanget quretCiggg a?gla" begterdCi%ar E‘ort's' Celilt" than Ry S LA S e e monasvan, | Lt e tako you by the hand: Moy yoit | vis methas whereby may bo | torests ns ailvaystoek, w0 | cigar ever manufactured. has stood the test in this city for more liv said T should go and see not to be fr avowed purpose of destroying the public she had been taught to lo E8|& e h gitlhood and which she continued to re- | 8UnL was the | i v r Factory's name on Jabel) pened production | that he may be well content to forego : 0 Qver the mountaigewinding down, attor the other, a8 theyrished into the | means & saving of capital foree and labor | dividends on his shares for the suke | thaln a year, and al smokers who know it prefer it to any other. . sk oS8 a0 Toovinto Froderiok town: rd. Aunt being rather feeble, and in | foree—a benefit to the world. It can p f tes. H there is a dou- ockholder: e ordet to save he Cousin Harriet Yone to have a flag to v Forty flaus with thelr ¢ Forty flugs with their ¢ v stars, mson are r tion that robbery. for it of any of the above dealers, a_near | robbed and busines ompetitors ar paneiiinen And Dealers Generally much as could, | haps ve said with slight qualifi said: _ ‘Auntought s cconomic struggle produce we.' The flag was | approximation to justice when n in the family Bible, and Cousin | tween cquals. But how is this affected o got it and gave it to aunt. Then | by railw diseriminations? It It requires eight lines of Mr. Whittier’s | she waved the flag to the men and they | ready been ed that they are not sse to say that the forty flags flying in | cheered her She was | merely in favor of one, but against £ g Frederick ‘on the mormng of the 6th of | yery patriot all knew Of | another, and the latter proposition | portation companies, express companie September, 1862, were all down at noon | ner. ‘The day before General Reno was [ is as important s the first. [ sleeping-car companies, and may su because Lee had itured the town, but | killed he came to sce aunt and had a tatke [ Its truth follows inevitably from | fice to th external corporations. then the poct fells it so much better than [ with her.”” the mnature of competition. hese | Hepburn committee found th i it could ve told in mere proge. The in- This is a very good story in itself, but | favors to the friends of the railway | way covered in this manner with vading army had marched from Leesburg, [ not nearly so good as Whitticr’s, with | power, or to those who have in some way | cles. twenty-three miles, since breaking camp, [ Stonewall'Jackson i it. It 1sall that is | secured an exceptional position, who Another abuse of moment is the pee having cross at Mauling | left of the legend of Barbara Frictelie | have to use an expression becoming | iar methods of construction ford. "T'he invasion was a remarkable [ and the country will have to be satislied | classic with us, gotten in “on the ground- | whereby men in their caps g Flapped in the morning wird; the sun i Of noon looked down and saw not one. hidd manager is only one form of this kind of Dircetors n i WHOLESALE BY JOHN A, FREYHAN, Omaha, (307 Leavenworth Street. Write for prices and terms. Orders by letter, postal card, telegraph Telephone 656, will receive prompt attention. y - one, being iulvlmlvd as one of deln with it. floor,” are an external force inst | roud oflicinls enter into contr = = 2 nee. [t was hoped for it that it would e which all their competitors must contend. | themselves in another eay roa) in all parts of the world, and has GINO T“ CCTTV O D Q | and gardens of magnolia and oleander a highly successul recruiting expedi- | Alldny lons through Froderick atroot Their rivals entor into the siragais ear: | u rich harvest from the hirmony botwecn | thae promoted a beneficont uind of intor: | GENOA, THE CITY OF PALACES. | fets™s Seomccivatiy. toonmitaf sander tion. Thc address of General Lee to the Sounded thotroad otimarching foet: rying a weight, a weight varying in | the two parties to the contract. nationalism, while it hasat the s i i nd when. us at present, the cit; people of Maryland, not to speak of the All duy ong that froe flug tost amount, but at times great enough to | Th Lwvay power in stock- [ strengthened national bonds; it h sorated and the ships, sted more florid production which Colonel Over the heads of the rebel host. bear down even th - | wa and the present and s s lying in the itated the spread of knowledge, and 1 | A Genoa Fete—Unveiling the Statue or radley T, Johnson ins- provost m n | graver evils for tha future in-tho. im- | many ways tende sthichl eleva- e T Bradley P g many ways tended to the cthical eleva King Victor Emanuel, . Where competi | addressed to the people of de E7or its torn folds rose and fell covered w. it pennons, flags, and 000 | X g : ) On the loyal winds tuat loved ftwell; rp in th ys tor empires of land owned by r: tion of the race. We must regret that its ay cany sight is one -rrovesthm. As such it was a failure from de of rings and combina- | ways,must be p :d over witha beneficent features and its 1deal demo- o TO BE LONG REMEMBERLD. ts beginning. There w no welcome to And through the hill-gaps sunset lzht he freight on goods 1s frequently | ercnce to the fact of their existence cratie character havo not been still better | S1GHTS, SCENES AND INGIDENTS. tne army of the confederacy. On the Shouc over it with o warm good-night. (a\r%luah than the profit on them, and Still mo are theimoral evils | developed, while for the good it has £or the two evenings of the 18th or contrary, their reception wus decidedly | ywoula it were so. The manner m | SUgNt wion in charges in fayor of one | connected with corporate management. | hrought we should remember in profound —— 16th !I\rc(&»luuluh tho oo, The de o8 unexpectedly found | @ pioh the Frietehie logend originated | PATt -Under this head effcetive essavs might be | gratitude the devotion to the welfare of | High Priced Opera Seats—The King | SiXty thousand dollars have heen exnend themselves i a hostile count General | (© vory simple. A Frederick lady vis- | 1ortune of that one and to ru com- | written with such titles as, )"*Corruption | fumamty of Watt, of Fuiton, and of eaalQ teon = The Reabtialana in Genoa, for M"'T and in fire- Lec diccovered that his sympathy for the | 3160 WiliiiNon some timo adter the in. | Petitor no Harm.”’ “Lying no Sin,” *Theft no | George Stephenson, and of a long line of o 2 worke, and to-night the illumination has peonle of Maryland in ‘‘the wrongs and outrages that” had been inflicted upon them by the government of the United Btates” was misy 1, for they did not show that they ‘‘possessed a spirit too Jofty to submit to such o government.” All the stores were closed. There was no g'mplfly of rebel bunting. When th. nt colovs s, brilliant formed with colored glass cefully fromithe houses, 1t is stated that even such delay in | Crime.” No onc feels thi shipment and such annoyance s way can inflict on more keenly | seientific investigators and discoverers Evening lllumination. been beautiful. “Arches of difi Tl ;h:\n the nlwriglu business 1?n|n. 1tis) m} - | who preceded them and prepared the cr<|).~~ \le s;rm-lx at inter pss mannot in | less to deny any part of thas impeach- and who since eir time i 2 T palm branche: I e i R R e N e N R | Wi S, S O L B oA, Italy, July 19.—[Correspond | cups, bend ) 0 i bankruptey. All th immense | our popular heroes are becoming dis- | these worked without hope of pecuniary of the Bee.J—The day has passed in | and tancy designs in gas jets and innum- te of cconomic resources. Tulent in | honest and suceessful adventurers. ‘Bven | yeward for the love of their kind. These | such confusion and excitement that one | erable Chinese lanterns turn might into business, accumulation of capital in va- [ ministers of the Christian religion can be | are our true herocs. To our railway | may well wonder whether Genoa was | 48 I'he Barbicre di Sevigha was wiven rious forms, and organizations extending | found to whiten their characte and | kings we owe nothing. More than | built for an to-night at the Carlo Felice opera house, over a wide area, all of which ought | present them in the light of public | ample compensation have they received 5 b 3 Gital fal Pt I'he Kmum_nl quoen were present and | closd a ewspaper siip reciting the | to have been a biessing to the laboring | benefactors; and did not “the people of | for such doubtful services as thay have | 8 ® beautiful fair ground, or to weut | Jittle attention was puid “to the artists Leo had come SIThumataticesloHiaTbara) tehios o, | Population and the entire country, ars | New York a few years ago.propose to | rendered. people and horses out toiling up and | during the fivst part of the porformimon Over the mountains winding down, tion when Lee entered Frederick, Even annihilated. The best known example 1s | erect a statue to a man who sended his down its steep, picturesque streets. I The house jammed and the lowest Horse and foot Into Froderici town, w Mr. Whittier is not disturbed, not- | the Standard Oil company. It received, | life a conviet? Did not that same povul; TS have a dim recollection that at 11 a. m. seat of any kind - was twenty- on a fool’s errand, for while, to quote the | BROW Br: o FEREE T8 BO0 Crr e o tnd | 8¢ already stated, $10.000,000 in cighiteen’ | tion recently gaze with a kind of admira- MRS. MACKAY'S ROMANCE. e e L IR Thasini, said to be the language of Bradivy dohnson, *the vieto- | WIhstcting the BEOSIE TR IS OBORC | months in rebates. If it had done busi- | tion upon “men who perpetrated a il Bl 8 i atest tenor living.and the basso Rapp, rious army of the south had brought free- '"N_ ] \g‘fll‘ . “L“:l oS dei o S'I‘l:.(““‘ sat what would have been cost for | successful robbery, and vlundered the | F1om Long 1sland and Poverty to Oal- | whirled us into the station of this “city e much feted, the king and queen dom to their sons,” the benighted Mar O o o Dk B eabdbass o8, it would still have had that enor- | aity of New York of ral millions of ifornia and Luxury. of palaces,” and deposited s fif 4 suffo- | leadiag the appliuse. il danders somchow. i oforred Hopprossion | Aeniited BY R B Arbati b rol um as profit. If it had transucted Yes; we are rapidly supplying | Some time ugo, says a writer in the | cating crowd on the platform of the de- [ July 20.—This morning the king visited more galling than the Austrian tyranny.” | tof [RALERCE 8y B8R FRCHe s at sach terms as would have ing and dramatic miaterial for the | New York World, o romantic and inter- | pot. Kind friends rescucd us, and taking | many of the manufuctories and pubiie But wo have brought the rebels into | lived mn Frederick at the time of Lee a loss of §5,000,000 for oth who will therefrom i 4 4 ” | buildings, and the queen the usylums Frederick in advance of the poet, which | entrance. 2. ‘That she was intens g esting story was related to me concern- | carriages we were driven rapidly to the h ke Sy X it > me amount of business, there | paint startling pictures for theinstraction | ¢ 4 3 kot L and hospitals. y B L'"Ol purn:lsing alnse L miulfi fvrlc d {;;}l hu"g'c “‘;“ f,"““ fl‘:‘lj‘dfl‘g“’;"‘:]’:“k Fols | would still have been an’ equal | and amusement of his renders, ing the American bonanza queen, Mrs. | monument of the late King Victor Eman- | corved with the greatest demonstrations narel over the mountain wall, while 0 y &, L o 5 = o ! A . 3 5 ek 5 sum for distribution among the There are many things which the rail- | Mackay. Years ago, comfortably situa- | uel, which his son, with great ceremony, | of aficetion and “loyalty, and the Whittier moves along with the jig-jog | from her doorstep and waved her fl Y baIng ance in the distance of the sc vasion of 1862 and spoke of the open sym- pathy and valor of Barbara krietchie. ‘The story was told again s n, and it nev I()Sll the telling. hittier received his first knowledge of it from Mrs. E. D, E. N. Southworth, the novel- ist, who is a resident of Washington, faryland, My M \V[mu_ Mrs. Southworth wrote to Mr; o, there was Lo Whittier concerning Barbara, she en- other purpose than to s ieriacors : ! members of the company. Itis o matter | way advoeate will urse in favor of our | ted in & modest home at Northport, L. L, | had unveiled fust half an hour previous. trot of bullad measure, A, vost but she waved it at Burnside n | of " conrso that 1ts competitors were | railways. He will endeavor to show that [ lived a cozy little family of three—athor, | it Wit % R W LR el | @old tivery of “the royal B thon, aome g ruined, and idlo factorios, old pipo lnos | rates’ are lower in Amorica than in | mother and litle dnghter. For a timé | Qut Asapbotptmont ol ing 00 0 fO% | Sianal for prolongod” ! wed with hor foUrscoro ycars and ton, When no longer used, and business wrecks | Europe; but there are three things he | all went happily along, until the hus- | tho Inaugi D & clapping. At 2o'clock thi {r. Whittier wrote the poem he od s elosely s possible the Mr. Whittie; ames-day, througliout the country gi idence of | will fail to mention in his comparison. | band and father was taken ill; then came | we found that Pagani, one of the two | heing Queen M:”w""i“”"l iy, Fi the eathedra enormous economic waste, It is not to , our ruilwuys have been built at a | dark days in the cottage, and a sharp | sculptors of the statue, had reserved | she went to high m the point to urge that the quality of oil [ low cost, owing to inferior quality of [ struggle for hfe was each day and hour | seats for us in the pavilion next to the and remamed kne has been improving, and that the price of | construction, and still more owing to the | enacted. Then came a lull, Kind friends | one occupied by the voyal family and | jug the ceremony ' | oil has been declining, any more than it | eheapness of right of way-—often, indeed, | walked ge tly about with troubled faces [ suite, After examining the monument, | handsome g Bravest of all In Frederiek town. Bho took up the tag the men hauled down: In hor attie window the stafl she sot, o show thut one hierrt wus loyal yot. house. It was a present from Dr. Stiener, a member of the senate of Maryland : i\ A Y S TP R S . | is to the point to urge the'alleged enival- | costing nothing—in a ne untry, and | and a solemn hush, and that indefinable | which is a beautiful picture ! B, Didshor Tho poot snys sho id The iz, which was i betwen the | G’ fialfan Drigands s a. plca for | 10 the Jovel and otharwies favorable sur- | something which always tccompanies | AN IMMENSE EQUESTRIAN §41 tho candles' foll_on her beut head and VSR Iving Xoi Yo aud hor old e e B Erietenio mave ahonrty | highway robbery. Doubtless the mana- | face of our country. 1f we estimato the | death seemed to say that all was over, | well cxceuted in bronze, folded arms, - On - leaving the cathedral BT sup-did not. The mare'y e it menies raoms, e b | &ers of this company have not been alto- | average: cost of our railways at [ all suffering had passed away, and the | through the sticots to seo the much (al we drove to n}u,b““h'- prose faiks, with thelr sim- | welcomo to Burnsido's, trqops, has but cr blind to their permanentinterests, | $35,000 per mile, 1t is a génercus | moral remains of the fatherlay ealm and | of corations, Iindiess evergreen STURLA, ’ Blo, prosulc storv, ure mora likely to be | thitty four sttt s S oy yard i | &nd may have given the public some of | figure, * wher tho * Hiropoun | quict. Mother and daughter were soon | wreaths, garlands, flags, bamners and | o0 E UL QRGNS - Llo) poos wlth ble touching. [ 100000 PEORARIY R the advantages’ of improvements in oil [ railwiys with which comparison is mado | to begin a long, bitter struggle for bre forod the” oye.” and from | bathing plack, Gay wb fouk, S: yorse. They say she did not, and they | length. T T production, while the enormousincreased | will probably average $140,000 per mile. | in a great world alone. Across the coun- indow waved the | i (it being tho time, apparently, for the [eFoina nosition to know. Btrange to | . ocnios workls 616k supply of oil was such as to force | Second, no attention will be paid to the | try whirled the flying train, On, on it | rich axloy draperies.of tho || B (b bORE Le R S BE e i #iy, mobody over thought to ask thom be- | BTG Hes on his raids no more, | down price it the oil was to be disposed | fuct that terminal charges constitute a | rushed, panting, puiling, snorting for | cushions on the vailmgs. =beople fuivly § EEVER T ot B T leant S Longaakiol s tio Linnoaster : of. Itis a well-known fact that millions | large part of freigit expenses, and that | duys til the jouriey ended and California | hung from tho caves of tho houses and | SR SR S0, "L OF Gonoa. EERigor put theuquestion s fow davs Honortohort andletntene |\ of ‘burrels i reservoirs have been | these are lower with us per mile on nc- [ was reached. 3 wo all felt quite ropuid for our ‘watching | glenacier grove i w6 viewi of Henon fll?n F(lflm‘-I pl:lvf\l I!“v"ll'l)‘"l"l{ “f‘&'.{’f"' BU. 10 DOE RS, 00 DLOROWALS DIOK, held from the wmarket in ovder | count of our long distance: Third, you Among those who left the train was a | and waitin, '“lh.(:lh ‘l:“ ‘1: :.-‘y‘.m:;-‘: :::11:! e ot th By 2 ik n‘u “d)“":;u IR iy h;m"l‘);t'l’; Over Barbara Frictehie's grave, to raise prices. Furthermore, it [ will not be informed thav quality of ser- | black-robed wowan and a fair little girl. | queen, precede )m.lwlu"ul’u T A ST Flug of Freedom and Union, wave! is worthy of notice that Ru 1n | vice is a vital element in reasonable | Alonein a strange land. Then followed | minister petroleum is now a competitor of Ame What probability is there thut | weary days passed in fruitless search for | Via Ror r home and asked Georgs Eissler, a while the people shouted and | pg REGATIA AND CROWNING ILLUMI- 1- | charg German, who had hought the F hie Peace and order and beatty draw o atrole! 1tk h the crude Rus- | your freigh il be shipped " | work, Life is not so easy after all to be- | checred franticall ul the three great NATION w ! _ TR SRR Round thy symbol of light and [Rw; can petrolenm, although the crude Rus- | your freight will be shipped promptly, | work. Lif Ay Pl 3 4 b -« e 5 4 . lomestond, for information in regard to LN, 4 sian o1l contains only thirty per centum | that it will move rapidly, and that it will | gin anew in a strange place and without | iron-cladsin the harbor .l}lul I“' aulixu,i 0 1 Incon 1va i (8B B2 gadLRERYIS ALY 8 heroine _uf Wiuttier’s poem. The And ovor the stars above look down, of refined oil, while the Amcrican con- | arrive in safety®, What percentage of | friends, Steadily the small stock of | that male the su rounding ul“s and on honrd the _*‘Soluntn,!* ono of the wers he received did not please him, On'thy stars below in Frederick town! tains eighty per contum. It must be ad- | freight is injured or destroyed in a coun- | money grows smaller and smaller until, | mountains echo for the nezt qus ard ¢ men-of-war lying about a quarter of a d when Jiissler told him that Barbara mito from the quay. Threo of these great id not tuko up tho flag the men hauled | Barbura down é"'d set :hu stall in her attie win- | & “l"( 0 |“' ats onily 4 dunis Dutelnig ahow | 1768, her parents being Nicholas and | that this line of business should be x itte . ' imes savings i v like Grer v i i i i astline: arvi stares hour. In the afteraoon we wal ctohie was born at Lan- | mitted thai there are at times savings in | try like Germany, and what in Ameriea? | with ail “its ghastlines, starvation stares | an | fha. s Clate. Tor malden namo | transactions of business by a monopoly, | ¢ sons ‘are difficult in freight | one in the face und_there is no alterna- | through some of the Y o | Vossols wero mrranged on each sido of She was born December 3, | but when these are desired’it is essential | charges: in passenger charges easy. No | tive but to beg. So this mother and | NARROW DAKK PASSES CALLED ST 5 | the harbor, one before tho othe % 3 f one disputes that charges for enger | daughter found™ the sunny land of ”“i for which Genon ME e " : s0 famouns. at 8:30 the royal , 3 S o ‘rederick | & public undertaking, in order that it | service are far higher in America, and | West not quite so bright as when viewed | scarcely three fec ide, uml‘ x‘u ISEArY [ AkRiR 48 SHOA _’_m““'wl fp the strcot canio tho rebiol tread, B et Sl e | Mav bo. rogulated, and that the entire | there can Scatcely be a doubé taat, when | from afar, and thus it huppened that ti staon, I e howes on cuch aide are K. wasapdoned ot G gp ol wall Juckeon riding ahoad. " Trietelije, & gl in 1806. She d ¢ may parti e in these advanta- [ all elements are properly considered, | fragile child stood upon a corner asking un;g alu to ni BUMIQEIA gl 0SS O and _queen stood in the pavilion A Decomber 18,1562, Mr. Frictchie having What wo have tolook at in this | freight charges will' be found relatively | alms. A . sunlight over Denet s e and it is | waving, while the six bands, one on vl a R N o st oy | able and legitimate busin These | gium and Germany. The charges now | and appealing look of this little waif that ) WORCAr ORI en | aiv. Her mujesty was dressed entirely in “) o dust brawa b stood sty | oty onvecbed e ol Tame ot 4 | mon form wart of the commonweaith, | inder consideration are the Fates for tho | a0 touched the heart ofa passing vich man? and yallow, und scam to rusl to tho opett | Sy Mot wionty was drossod eatirelydn # out blazed tho ¥irlo blist. heroiue of Whittier's poem, and the body cannot thrive when its | ordinary average shipper between two | He stopped and n!m-hliuu.ml llu]e {I!“;Y uvf;'; b"‘l“-‘m“‘ li0k6 BlaeBER | nuoh o throat rich white mantle over 1 #hivered the window, pano and sus - e mupl.cr?‘ arc in a diseased condition. It | average points. < and then l(ul]‘(lnvt-.-d f|f~| m‘ "‘,' mmle‘u)r “;:\:.‘ HUBNA JICeIM 3 Vhen the king gaye the £ reat the bunner with solin and gu: Why He Will Never Get Marricd in ?l\:rl {I;‘?‘:‘x;x‘:;:}n‘;} :\Ll;att\&):;]h(iol:g3}:‘;5!:5; |)a¢ig§:1 xinsll;vll:u;lr‘:mll :L“:’fi:.lllx;ll I.Anuui?\:im::; il‘(:‘l:w‘,,dx:l'll:lir “1& n:amrvmm he 0l b, thanks s stringeney o o 1, ci pxtens| bl cther rates are & 0 B ! ! § A 3 ., feilanca of 9 vy gun in the hi How sad to npqll 80 prott 1 Ohuroh Agale., methods? they ought to be with us, and the enor- ity Is akin to love." 8o siys tho | sanitary fnws and the vigilance “of the YulFly mate one's teoth of i ore 18 only ong account of 11| Toledo Bl “If Tever get married | What is the extent of these discrimi mous wauste in our methods shows that | proverb, and in this ease it proyed to bu | city commissioners, white boats shot from the sturiing point ckson's entry into’ Fredeviek, and that | in ehurch s all'me s goat,” | tionst Itissuch as to affect seriously | they cannot be. anear relation. Now comes the most an e A ia vAsnlL v is that | At tue wharf and Ve, suilors written by a union army surgeon | said a bashili n rday. ourentive economice life. At the time of But the question of low rates is a minor | romantic partof the story, and the part uliar to .’w.;" 2 b vakinliyds thal el o Wi n chizge of the hospital there atter now?” the investigation of the New York Hep- | one. “he low rates which we do_enjoy | most like a fairy tale, Fortune showgred | of “honncting® the hotsel, & vers rge, 0 tthe timo. *Jackson I d ), he revorted, and he | burn e upon the two strangers, The | broad brimmed gtraw hat, b \ mmittee it was found llmtl spec are not frequently «-ambli:lhwl at the ex- : g t of it, tes were the rule, and the regular taviff | pense of the owners of railway property, | first \ P B ks & . NS I ate on the 215t of Septemb Gt | L' ae mareiod not long ago. and s my | oxisted. only. for the weak und inoxporl: | Ad Hiore is cyso for rogret. whon. peo: | the wenithy Mr. Mackay, and in a aurs | or kroen rikbons uad baoud lows, Lo tha pust have seen hii, as 1 witne: wifu's parents were pillars of the ehureh | enced. Notorious is the contract with | ple do not obtain a return on legitimate | prisingly short time the little Eva had | b ol 1 of all the troops through the | it had to come off there, so they thought. | Schoellkopf and Matthews, millers of | Investments. Unless we are 8 nation of | found a generous, kind futher, and with | strings being ¢ 3 |llx‘"x“ l:\hr.‘ lm:lu T B " 3 Lier favo nd they hud found proved to be | peasant men wear, s trimmed with red | bilige deafoning. Ther i, and then he fi Tiey made . very and tie only thing thit king's wer k at to recognize him," th seemed to get mad ar be thoug works Not & word sbout Iyl Well, some ropairs werd being made in | Buflulo, New York, which enabled them | paupors, we desire those to receive a re- | the mother it was "off with the old love, | holes ure cut fortho eavs, wnd the Lok | B0 Em universal condom frictenie and tlus incident, the church, so the masriage took place in ntinue business when other millers lurn who 1nvest their means in railways. | on with the new.” With the widow’s | ensembl ] Ay “;0 arhen | Wits an oxquisite imitation of the Legut oll Holmes, to, was m I ' the Sunday-school room. 1 'S whoere e obliged to suspend operations. A | Are they not a part of the common) | weeds were laid away all traces und | the poc loast By PO U A | e of Milan, It burned for nea ¥ O on lis way to find his | the whole trouble came . We stood on | vivid lighf is thrown on the true charac- | wealth? Aund do we not desire the pros- | signs of that part of her life in whic u';‘“f“"mu m:ndn, ‘r‘.w (n,; ,‘l. & 40 i I.‘r‘c- | s e i on, roported mortally wounded at An- | the platform wlcre the superintendent’s | ter of the sgreement by one clause in | perity of the commonwealth? POV m{:.ml trouble formed 50 lurg of them rowinds ono of_ traveling s fon jand ni 1y adin S , had it been true, | desk stood, and before the minister got | this contruct, which reads as follows: Still more vital is the question of eco- | part t was just a step from poverty CrOWS, 0'C ‘u“ e drovo sa.ue | was magnificent, and ¢ ) ilod to reach his | started I noticed a great many peoplo vided, however, and this agreement | nomie liberty, which, as our first article | dazzhng wealth, and in all the following patie OF '."j'l'-“f‘_ RAAOB S o 5 on the surrounding hills and havaetold | smiling in the audience. I didn't know | is made upon the express understandi has abundanily shown, is involved in the s #he has ever held the brimming | and dined at the latter j " ‘h:n‘nd i 1 Wain tops was brilliantly lightad, looking the sea. ) ormers, with barps and guoi- | tional and | L y ¢l I are ?‘up of fortune to her lips, gayly, thought- | garden ove A ) d N8 A all seemed to | and consideration thut said second party | problem of the railwa; ! 4 \ i lessly, and has yet to find the dregs which | strect pe Tnover said | [i. e., Messrs, Schoellkopf and Matthews] | good morals and polit what to muke of 1t, Th cquully vits be logking over iy head. 1 integrity. dark outlines marked by innumer: ble eandles. At midnight the royal party 1 o no0s Junt After the Cap- t. Barbacs Frietehio ," baul e hox anything till the thing was done, then 1 | shall regard and treat this agreement as It has not been thought necessary to | lie calmly at the bottom of the cv stal t.fr(,,v “Fn‘fl.‘l‘fi olxxfx Xlnfix 11)]-'[‘:.“_] ind | P Sed, and an bour lutor 06 Tith, AAd J‘. and it 18 Tow 10 the possession | turnad around and leoked up. What do | confidential, and will use all reasonable | dwell on the inestimable benetits which | liquid. e 4 & | B _"‘3 T the beantaful ended.’ I forgot to mention that Pagini s “lhmlschué and her daughtol you think I saw? One of those con- | precantion to keep the same secret,” r railways hrought us, for this is wonder if the Prineess Colonna will | Corighanus o he henuty and. Burzagil, the two sculptors of the b 4 #oun'lunl mottoes ha ant of Baltimore ! I'his new means of | ever relate the story of her early child- HARBOR OF GENOA, | e, . Abbott, of Frederick. Mrs. ] gohue was the niece and adopted daughter | our bheads, and it s of Mrs. Frictehie, and the flag came to her | ehildren to come s part of her inheritance, a ocup out of i 2uough to make a m itz right over ot long ago a mere har topi 7 P by o o ol WO 0] 3 littlo | attenpte: l/‘;' do u comparatively small | communication and transportation has | hood to her own wee son; or will it re- w ith its biu k hlu.l!nl (.l' l{)n\lla‘ M":n:‘.‘v,:l(\'n anuu Isn't that iness in the purchase and sale of cot- | added to the material resources of the | main as a vever-to-be-revealed-seerot lm_m cach ;Illmu i ‘wnh‘u i 'w{“, ton. “l thought,” said he “+*-" would | country, has brought wun near to his | whichy fortress and coveres o groves | nanuel, dined ning. Muan Cuase, id: 'Sl

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