Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 22, 1886, Page 9

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RIFLE RANGE AT BELLEVLL Ei.‘iffff,,"}i'.t“";!i“.’.‘,.i’.“.';,‘f.','?fi\ whetr TCALIFORNIA'S LONG BRANCH, | TE svAn oF persis wanem | it he would, be guilty of a favorable re: Beauty and Yoth the Only Perqui- { { port for a bad shot. ~The pits, it is true sites for EMeMng ite Portals, | The Annual Rifie lomph!ition of the De | e conneeted witl the spectators by tel: | Whers the Placid Pacifio Tekes Brighter i Sitiont CNEST Undsr Bivesior ephone, but that is always in charge of | * > e Trrata W o i partment of the Platte [ the oficer in command, and is never Hue Than Elsewhere. reigns 1n Persia the ruie was that no f | -— used to facilitate or accomplish an un ' - male person ér ‘ten years of age | THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. AUGUST 22, 1886.~TWELVE PAGES. ! DESCRIPTION OF THE RANGE. | Worthy act | she be found on the eof route | GE ¢ A SHORT VISIT TO MONTEREY found on t ‘4' A !\.!‘ e IS Bol |ND I'O ( :] OSE OI I’I‘ Besides the target mentioned, there is of a royal wite or daughte one for short range, o . 3 -] to disobey this order n now Euro six by four feet in How the Shooting s Conducted—The | size, Wwith ~proportionate ‘circios sur. | The Most Beantiful Summer Resort | 10 (0008 thiS EE BEon 0 ) f bl —t r I' 1 t I , Systemof Credits—Target Prac | s ok QR This is for 200 in the State—The Drives and turning down a Side street whe ¢ (0] 1 l s y a y S \ tice — Skirmish Firing— The pits are a pecn {obe for Walks and Baths hear t <of The Contestants L nervous ine t men are me' in sh [ compe « 1y a bank of earth The late \.mm minister, Mr. Ben It is many years since Omaha stood in ) equence, many mortals | pondence of the [ Mr. W un | R \w by .", z I';“;“-',"T plan, With danger, 80 to speuk, like Birnam | cannot divest themselves of the fear t | Wallace, of the Omaha National, said to e American simpheity, he was accus [ for the Omaha Sunday ] t ¥ " tomed to ride through the streets with wood, of moving to Bellevue. | Perhaps ta bullet may come through." | me just before the Nebraska Editorial | 16 SOEVANE, Blooling tis bt 5 ! the stillness o placethe oy . e & ng the proces .adie’s Button Shoe, former price, # Since that time the onc btk the § excursion loft Omnha for the Pacific | s e, former price, $1 \ ' one day, he failed tot ont of its hears a sharp rifle crack. There may g s G AR B L Ladles Fine Kil Shoes. former priee ARGAINS 10w 0 conts, wscended to 0 Hiow 410, metropolitan greatness, while the other | several in rapid succession, and seve coust, *'If you go to California, visit Mon Sl Ly st il has mamtained the commonplace level of | may be aud Bla dt tho same instant. | terey and the Hotel del Monte—cven if [ Was beaten, andfio bimisclf was b led | 'l“"""_\"m Shoes, "'H.m'v price $4; now 82,50, : yural simolicity. Since that time the | Yolume of noise is conditioned upon | you see nothing else in the whole state.” | 1t0 % A TORE TN HAY be quiy Lodged Frite bbb il e Db A Gt A L greatest attention that has been directed | these circumstances. He cannot see | Wiph this injunction on my mind, Lleft | 1o pat up with the apology “‘that natar AL SULLILOU R D AR § to the little city over the Missouri, is that | ‘”[,‘"“ ”"vl“““, Mtte l‘,”"'l'l'_‘,‘“ :fi“' (o m the excursionists (whose itinerancy did | the roy rvants would not recog Meas' Fine Shoes. former price, & W 1y 4 now occasionen by the forthconnng rifle | of the eivilian’s cutiosity, and fires only | hot include Montercy) and took a run | nize a one-horse minister, Mens” Good Calf Boot. former Price $3: now § 5 i competition of the department of the | with the intent of reaching a *bul down there with a party of triends, in Gieneral Gersteiger Kahin, an Austrian Men's Gennine Veal Kid Boot, former price $3.75; now $2.50. i ofticer of P eye.” Simultancously with the explosion | cluding Mr. and Mrs. Dewey and Miss LA AL S R f};:’f.m ”’“’ Mens' Fine Shoes, former price $35.50: now $ 3,85, To the uninitiated it may be well to [ 91 the wed| n e -’\le-r“‘, ound, | Bulle Dewey, of Omaha. We spent yes- | cration. He met the late_queen THOthOP Mens” Wool Hat <, former price $1.0%: now 25 cents. L state that this competition isan annual | gt gt The buller has sped. throtgh | terday (Sunday) in admiring the beauties | and the royal ladies when hie was on foot, Mens' Genuine Fur Hats, for 0w §1. ¢ to the wall like Titsclf 1n the wood | of the place, its uncquuled drives, its | turned his native, Mens Fine Far Hats, former price $3.50: now £2.20, EH occurrence, and in it is centered the at- | the target, and buri tention of almost every soldier in the orheen drowned i the river beyond. | cosy hotel, aud we urge upon other | &0, as each cartiaze passed, deliber Men's Working Shivts, former price 65 cets; now 40 cents il partment. Itisnot devoid of interest, | And yot but n few inches are be: | Omaha friends who may travel this way | ey siutcd from the back of his head, Men's Fine Working Shivts, forner price 75 cents: now 55 cents, | however, to others who ave not of the "‘”'1I_":_"“fl.:l'l"'"" l's Ixh :L' ““‘l"l|'|:‘|"l:"”'; U8 | the same injunction that Mr. Wallace | told the shah, who persy Wed him o re Men's Fine White Shirts, former price $1: now 59 cents, | army, especially sportsmen who follow [ 0GR G000 PG 00e and signals the | gave me. peat his novel salutes, and then congrat Men's Fine Bosom Shirt, ¢ lar attached, former price, § now 80 cents, Il the scores as they appear from day to day | judge at the other extremity of the ne fastest train on the Pacific coast | ulated him on his discretion Men's Overalls, former pr! L NOwW 15 g i : Judg ! - g . & A R ’ A good deal is known of the royal s 0 > i in the publie prints. Two years azo,when | Tange. — This he does with iron dics, ae- | Funs from San Francisco to Monterey, | A RpoCHvat1s (Hosn of the roval sur Men's Jeans Pants, fornier p fow 74 cants, { the competition was heid but a few miles llu;'lk”:l‘f\ .:;’ fl]\"‘ «::.'.""\1."'5“»'.!“L]“,v.|\'.'.‘. ::r 125 miles sonth in three and one-half | 500G seeing it; but the o LA Men's Good Working Pants, former price, § now 83 cents. i v north of Omaha, the pleasant duys [ Parksman, 16 the soldier SUties Ahe | hours. Itis throngh beautiful countey, | fow. A French ' pianiste, Mm Men's Fine Dress Pants, former pr 30: 10w S1.10, ) brought to the scene the pretty featu That is signalied by the marker ranning | th Santa Clara valley, past long stretehes | Abbas, an aged French woman Mew's Fine Dress pants, former price, : now $2.15 | and beautiful eycsof many of our society [ up a white iron disc upon a pote, ahove | of cultivated felds and by suburban | passed forty years in the royal Trunks, fornier price, $1.25 HOW 75 conts | ladies who professed the deepest inte the bank. The circle outside the center | towns where the weaithy people of San | JErDICHeS to the roval lad Y N ] . % ot X i . 3, ian lady, the wife of Mastautlul Irunks, former pr now $ | est in the target work. ‘This interest was | €0 ’,"'}..'.‘"."',\?‘.'”',.’.‘."‘,','.“”“"‘ ';‘.1'[' Jed | Francisco have their homes MenloPark, | aisk; wara: the! oMy DordORN 1h Woo0 ZinsTriks, forimer jivie now 83.50 | by no means ed if_the marksman | J16: Hhe nest cotpte thrve, SiEnied BY | Redwood and Sun Jose. who could really speak on this subject Wivaai L bl | was % handsome young fellow, and above | Sk crosson o white ground: the Bt ] =60 foots at home as soon as he enters | with anthority. “During my long susi- 'H".',f": LA LA A AL, all, it he wore a shoulder strap and had | by a back disc. Should the markswan | the spacious rotunda at the Hoter del | fdence in Persio TonlyKnew of one harem i it S TR o e SRR e | not yet been stranded on the shouls of | not hit the & ali that isannounced | Monte, especially if it be evening and the t:ui_n:Ih i in v'lnml ‘l.ll-\‘ : a ; bl ;‘ k .~|'n‘ was 'l‘hrv:nl Lace funm-r price. 20 cents; now Seents. y matrinony by ared flag, \\Imnv the soldiers eall a | jadies are gathered about the big fire | Mgumee Qi not ocenr. i (h‘.‘_'k;m“ S Thread Laces, former priee, 35 eonts: now 16 cents. l The remoteness of the range from | Ml bl sere " Besided (S 1et | place, where the logs burn mertily R R LA R Torchon Laces, former price, 20 cents: now 11 cents. Omaha, however, need not be offercd as b SRS TR 3 Le it known, the nights always cool | while he was engaged in excavating a Torehon Lices, former price, 27 cents; now 17 cents. an excuse for not attending the com- [ For the first time, this part of the work | at Montercy and tie days of such agree- | Waterconrse, \-.d."""-‘l"""“! himself in Ladies’ Gauze Underwear, former priee, 40 conts; now 25 eents, petition this year. There are two trains | witl be conducted ditferently from whatit | able, dehghtful temperature that the dit- | {1 fO54 Jare wod, ne ';I"‘.'!“"[‘, o Ladies’ Gauze Underwear, former price, 50 cents: now 33 1-3, in the morning on the B. &M, at8:10 | has been heretofor targets have | forence between the winter and summer | giood pardoned him, e o0 HETS Lad Underwear, former price, 63 conts; now #7 1-2 cents. and 9:20 o'clock, each of which stop .?;h‘,l.',h,s’r e .’.‘.I:";;m”',!:;'.:;;;i:f,l’ll‘“ | range of the thermometer is marked by Fresh acquisitions for the seraglio ar- Ladies’ Balbriggan Hose, former price, 50 cents; now 25 eents. i within a short distance from the range. | tions \"‘7,‘_‘“‘“”!_* Theso silhotette j AP6 but a few degrees. The hotel is roomy [ rive frequently, at times i batehes. The Lad Balbriggan Hose, former price, 65 cents: now 46 cents, { and comfortable, the dining room one of | mode of gettinz rid of those who ¥ 13 + S K * the most cheerful Uhave ever scen, and | ceased to pleasc is simple and yet in- Ladies' Brilliant Lisle Hose, former p £1.25: now 7 the cooking quite perfect, including glo- | genious. There is no sewing upin ks, Laies” Kid Gloves, former price, 75 cents: now 50 cents. I'u(r\’u fish from the bay 'll lu-lm hand no casting from towers, no bow-string, Ladies” Kid Gloves, former price, $1.50; now 75 cents, ne runs over to the club house, if it is | no poisoning. Some l)ru\mll 1 general I Jid G 5, for - pri 7 v ~ Ladies’ Kid Gloves, former price, 1 now $£1.10. evening, and watches the belles and | isinfc 3 e favord . : i o belles and | is mformed that he will be favord with Ladies’ Gosgamers, former price, $1.25: now 90 cent <. No trains, however, return until o'clock in the evening. But, what w the attractions of the range, the neigh- boring river and the leafy woods about, there is sufficient to eng: :1 frame covered with th | cloth, upon which dark paper is pasted They are placed at regular intervals, If the skirmisher hits the recumbent dum my, he is credited with five, if the kneel gred a pic-nicivg | ingone, with four, and the' standing one 0 | made with a st cents. e F ¥ 6 5 Y Y ROL ux play at ten pins; or lingers in the | a wife from the royal harem. To re - coterie until the .quu.u_h 'f' i nlxm_. o \»!Ih_l_)n'. h‘;‘“r”x“: e jous parlors or the ladies’ biliiard | fuse is !ml“““U]" the disgusted lady ar- Dress Goods, double width, for price, 10 cents: now 7 1-2 cents. Besides this, there is a mail road Skirm iring y fa e mc om, reserving the walk ound the | rives and is placed at the head of Iu Dress Goods, former price, 12 1-2cents; now Y cents. cult feature of the competition, espec- uly as above described. It requires ity, quickness of percention and under vastly different cireum from tar work. The soldier which leads through South Omaha, by the industri lately established there, and then skirting the hills to the south, | © and finally rounding that upon which H. | accu ounds until” morning. And when | new husband’s household. She usually ing comes and you glanc the | insists on his immediately divorcing his artificial lake, with its geyse foun- | other w and in any case treats them tain sending up a cloud of water | asinferiors. One of niy Persian friends e, 15 cents: now 12 1-2 ¢ 0 cents: now 13 cents. 0 cents: now 30 cents. Dress Goods. forier pr nts. Fine Plaids, former p Fine Plaids, former pri T. Clarke has erceted Bellevue college, | S ¥ 2 from the center, on which the sun- | was General F—Khan,” He Brocaded Dress Goods, former price, 50 cents: now 35 cents, finally leadsin a sinuous way through | s supplied with forty Lone It foums turn to ' violet and erimson | recipient of one of these E s, former pr HOW 18 conts. a lenty wood to the rango. Itis un- | being assimed to ‘each silhoutte, at 600 | ™ o0l 4nd through the ing | She led bim o sad life, and her neve 1 ALY AL shmeres, former NOW 45 cents. 1e Freheh Cashimeres, former price, 90 cents: now 5 1e French Cashmeres, former pri 5 cents: now e French Cashmeres. former price, 13 now 70 cents, 10 French Cashmeres, forme 5 HOW 72 cents, e French Cashmeres, former price, 3 now derstood that a number of driving parties | yards. Atthe command, 5 : to take this route during the contest, [ attention ch man loads, and at fubs ] aglimpse of the- turquoise blue of the | old eamel.” which commences on next Tuesday! | Sequent orders he advances, breaks into | paeific, which b brighter color r Beauty the few and There will be but one thing to destroy a double time until the command to halt | aqon they st then you exe simple ‘qualifications for entering the the plensure of the dris '"'n' that is tie Lo R ulto the dis- | STnis is indecd the resort of all r royal ha Variots accomplishnients information which s likely to be imparted, | tance and pos ssume ST IER T S okt ; b % ; that the wells which foud the Big “Pap. | Six seconds ave allowed for this, when the ReRuiparadie ongouril T U L feesgiven ahove are at and below cost, amd will rapidly close ont the stock. Our stock is large and complete pio.”" along side of which the roud winds, | command to fire is given. At the last hen step out into the grounds, for often acquired after the Lm\ has be sare all marked down as proportionately low as on the gools mentioned, which nature done much, but for are not of ‘“,m,, note of the sound, firing is commenc 3 ed into thelsemglio. ery lady Which @ oarps of forty gardeners is cou- | who becomes a royal 8ife lius 4 separat JOHN LINDERIOI.LM, i When you break through the last circle | and continued” in the discretion of the doing more. A range of pebbled | establishment and servants of her own in G114 and 616 South T BOSTON DRY GOGDS STOR of the waid you enier Upon & streteh of | Competitor for tftcen sccowds, when the 2 4 ks runs out under the trees through | the harem enclosure Only the fresh ar- S et | ACHAPTER OF EARLY HISTORY nts. 1-2 eents. branches of the giant oaks be fmul atch | luded to her but (in & whisper) « y little less than half a mile in | com firingis given by tho ength and abot® cne-third of a mile in The skirmishing | yrussplots of emerald greenness, b and those who L cd to widti, n}‘[‘.':.‘;'l white on all sides thick dyAnelanin o un\.(ll\\(m. flowers, such as one only scs ase, live together in usort of barrack, | S T8 o T e P oods abound, nof el e G Y o | in California, wi ctus garden here | under the supervision of the Amin-i- N ? iead, that active, yet s 4 A few did hold possession of the traet, | 1o nis is by far the mostinteresting | oy 4y fernery there, and “hollyhocks all | Akdas, an old faverite who acts as a sort Mh\ :\RL\U[ “"\1 THE\ SE]:“ ment T cannot be” mis but these have been saerificed, and on of the competition and well iy a row.? itnd hedges of foxgloves ten | of “mother of the maids. ery Thurs- card-sharp.” £ 1 this green hued meadow is the range. | WOHY the Sention o vsiors ) feet - high, and roses | without | day there isa kind of raview, ihe Shi No," suid the reporter, emphatically, 4 On the rig ity of glistening | In the turget shooting, euch manon | gndt “im' shaded * nooks are onally inspocting the whole cs Faces Which Belie the Characters of Their | s the professor looked at him in an in" | Something About Scrip-Town, Now a Por- i tents, the first being those of the oflicers b day fires ten shots at vacl of e | swings and teters and slides for the | lishment other than the recognized wives 0 quiring way, “thatis Rev. C. W. Sav- 0 of the Ol ¥ Ol Then cowas an open sjace, in the middlo whaaiubadiat bR das s hile the older young folks | and favorites. The throwing of the hand- wners- idge, vhmrur the Seward street Meth- | (A7 CE LA, g,f .‘xv"if.hxm'rm: Hl;lwllml" l';“;‘;:l!";:"";;f b opliotat S0 arlyars ol mwnning) ‘1.1-n,,».l._'m lln-nrfi'(url and tennis- | kerchief i} no wveution, and has not oc »\\V.“ufich R S SRRE | s limbs, from the top ol c ana 5 i i rounds, herc are three tennis courts | gone out of practice, ' “Well,” rephed the phrenologist, “re- Stars and tripes_ wave i the evening [ 600, Iving down. In the ftter posture, T e, ‘the® gomnis courts | gono out of practice, itimate wives (or | CHARACTER READERS: MISTAKES | 1yoniber'tiiat there are excoptionstoal | =*7-" -AND SPECULATIONS. | breeze. Fucing .nis space from the thers Waule e numper ot alties encn | bang Pni"lv«l plainly and all surrounded | akdi) for every Mussalman is four, The — . there comes_another typical — the headquarters, of the oft in seemingly I REOWIALONE 0T nsitha retaining nets of wire, [ head wife, the cousin of the shab, having | Some of Omaha’s Men Who do Not gentleman I should tike to | The Present High Value of Lots himself. Thr w Licuten- rge. On the nor’. side of the m Lic most complete arrangement | the title of Shukues-Sultana, is the King the 1s with noth- Which Were Once Bought H ant Mer W \u alist of ample mes are other officer headquarters. m asgume his 600 yards position | g5 Erame T b r known. Here | granddaugiter of Futteh Ali Shab, a ze Up" According to the ing to do but to_invest his money. His nward of these is the officers’ mess, | upon a wet sod, and remam immovable | 15 i 4hess and a finish, about the im- T ot AT v -f.,x that Principles of Physiog- look of self-satisfaction, his easy, careless for $1.25 per Acre. i ates’ quarters, their [ for minutes while making his shots. | uocoments here that display @ master | 110 of his descendants were alive at his nomy. walk are those of the miillion i I , dug outs and other | They went to the bull’s eye, too, notwith- | 4, death. This iady is mother of the crown “You are wrong agumn. Thatis Pro- | qyg growth of Omaha is so remarkabl i : . Still farther to the north is a | stanuing the didiculty. For the second | ““ppiitrle town of Monterey, historie | prince, or Valiad. Her e with fossor Patsy Fallon, the boxer and teacher 1o Froyin ot RIS O ANLR LD frame building which, in - the distance | time that year he stood at the head of the | 1o nious, Tes about & mlie wway, and | the king was. one of pol The npext | ‘Do you see that portly gentleman sit | of sparring. He would take it as a deadly | that few people stop to consider that 1t tment team; later, at Leavenworth, on the road is situn 1 | insult we linge, suggests old immense | wife in se and surrounding f ed fority is the daughte © you to call him a millionuire [ Was once a small town. The city of of s said a commercial m: ting over there Shiloh church. Butcloser observation | he shot to the leal .“““-' division team, | th " house, on the decc and im- | of Futteh Ali Shah. She is only kno to a reporter, as the two were enjoying a | to his face. | Omaha proper was lud out in 1854, un- leads to the discovery thatitis the bakery stillin the at the same | pocoments of which $ has been | to rumor as having & somewhat sharp Sl 4 f s The And so the professor rambled on,never | der the supervision of A. D. Jones, who of the camp. e stood at the Siead of the army | f{ihiad. There are two hundred and | tomwer. The thirdwife, and the nctual | Guiet after-sunper smoke in front of the | gjg, d by the misiakes ho lind | iy sull a vesident of the place. Exnocts { THE BANG caum, in which the best shots of the ser- | (i 4L Gie rooms, and the four im- | favorite, is. the Anys-u-Dowlet. She has | Millard hotel lust evening. “Well, his | mzde. Henry Hornberger and Dr. Mer- | 3 31L& resident of the: place | practi aking, extends from south | vice competed. Now, with a breasteov: | puyse tanks are heated by steam. As | been a legitim nearly ten years, | hobby is character reading, and he cails | cer happened to be passing down the | tion ran high, and in the cnsuing ! 10 north. i former extremity a row | ered with gold and v medals, with | {50 ef bathing, one can get that ouwside | s very fat, fairly good-looking, ind 18 | himself a professor of phrenolog | street and he immediately declared that | 1,000 acres of land lying north of the ¢ hairs, yet a comy ively young Compett of pum have been extended across the | & they were ing one man, he s barred from furthe ¥ we Neby in Hu‘ hv\ L.l rmers who had | limits, nd running east and w inificent sheet of water | said to ve very good-tempered and at- | phvcogomy. His title t along 8 ‘Iu ,()| two end or Iu £ - s frc 0P active, She actually iec 3 . wandered intc 0 see the sights. = T o f i represe nte Ae width lv%lhl' range "Ropes ;3:;3.;‘91 Ve nowW an opportunity to emu- | oo o m\, »ast, journcy to Europe; but the t- | in theeast. Pump him—you m able ulm“ R adlaes l T T TRy | e lled North Omahasor Scrip-town. wpl It was joined on the north by Sq pass through these, and forbid beyond e siec 11 | to write up a good article from what he m a professor of mathematices in | atoga, old town is quite mu.n for | tompts to see her by the Russians of them the intrusion of the stranger during | oo L THE SOLDIERS 'n bred who, for the first time so pertinacious, thot, to her | tells you.” seme colle John Francis passed by | which was then a rival to Omaha, and rifle practice or competition, At the { 1 _“l‘f““" 18 ld“-’.l vt“‘xm ""“{ :lic of the Spanish dominion pointment, she was sent back The “pointer” was sufficient, ana the | aud the \)h enologist, taking his cue from | whose limits commenced on the south at other extremi are two huge banks of | &Vt regimenyin the departmont, onc in December, 1602 that Don The the bland, persuasive smile, decided that Angs-u-Dowlet had im- | pows a point near the present fair grounds. mense influence, and yet she never takes y than the other, and | man™ from each company and two e tWo_ terraces, v\u-mlm"mw:\nl the | offic from each reciment being east. Behind these banks are eight | the representation. ‘The regiments white squares, each with a |.1 ¢k discin | now in this department are e Second the middle. The: the targets. On | Sixth, Seventh Seventecnth and Twent the bank in front of cach of these targets | firstinfantry, and Ninth cavalry. From s ,,..g' figure casity visible to the | the competitors, the twelve men ~who naked i from left toright, | make the highest aggregate score in both and one to eight, each designating the | target work and skirmishing will be se- nomber of a target. The T rty- | lected to compose the department tonm. five feet apart, Leading up to the [ The two men mnext in record to thase ted as alternates. The R ‘”‘r“““ t"l“"‘l' W8 | Mr. F. was a typieal confidence man. TR bribe. But her own family is well NALAUNG PYOFCESOT, Rev. W. J. Harslia came dashing down | x : 3 ranfar M raatotharivelati vos Al worthy, gazing down | the street behind his span of thorough- [ W88 |(L'vlllf|ll‘~mu‘uv of s])x:oul:mnn,‘ and \ he | portant positions at the court where their | upon the interviewer throngh o paiv of | breds, and it did not take the professor | @ great deal of money was invested in its named in honor of Caspar de Zuniga, | reputation is not that of their roy: gold-rimmed ey ses, “‘man’s face is | more than five seconds to make up his | lots, The Jand was taken und occupied Connudy Monte ey VicoroyiofMe xico Mo yiloifanilyBvers to mean open and interesting book. | Mind that he Pt furfman. When | under the town-site law, and when it be- and or ¢ expes C w of a vi * mitller who liv By D ink vis i) b YSSEd ¢ DIOKE O ol S ) 4 P 3 Vil q od as theu intention to found a_ churoh thero, ar vend, & mearly extinet vol- | The Creator has, in lus infinite wisdom, y. ¢ ])x)‘\nu oo thntmaniwalls | SineioLvalgols qUostion\Nasikaisail 430 but one hundred and ty-cight years no. which, capped with éternal snow, | printed ey man’s characteristics on | ing with stately tread” There 15 one | the legality of the title. A portion of it passed before a white man again trod | towers over Teheran, and may be seen | his face. Toread those characteristics | born to command, to divect and push | had originally been tuken up by a man that shore, when the good padre Juni- | at a distance of 200 miles. —3 requires a rare species of natural o any scheme which would fuail in the | named Robert Shiclds, who soon after- i rth, one b [ stian Vizeayus, acting und tions from Philip 111, ¢ : into the placid waters of this took possession of the country, s00n in front of the targets, arc eight | tWelve will be selc sero Terra, of whom we have all read in |~ Of the Seegahs, the mother of the Zil- hunds of men possessed of loss indomi- |y, RIS . " sats the the ar teams o e > fodd 5 0 s, the . 2 SC ent and large expe ol wards abandoned it, when it was laid ou i rows of small, white posts, about a foot | team mects tho the other tcam of the de- | flofon ‘Hur Jackson's beantiful novel | es-sultan, tho king's efdest Son, 1s the | o Shcernment s JAER.GRDREINER: | 6ai i on Fho Tines in, s face indi- | 10l et EE e eson ) above the ground, and forty-five feet .‘""‘I“ff nt in the division o ]( o Missonrt | Romona,” headed sixteen: missions She looks well after the interests | Some men have typical B, that foithe | ers SRt e S pur. | in town lots. Au_old mau named Beson i apart from east to west. Longitudinally, [ 8t Leavenworth, on the 1ith of next | g the Francisean convent of San of hor son, She was a poor Kurdi girl; | student of physiogomy reveal the nature, | poso. Is it not so?” Ina few words the | bought Shiclds’ right and squatted on it { girl; | however, they divide the range at one | month, to forma division tean, composed hundred’ yards intervals, and six occupy | 0f the best shots in the division, and this 4 each line between the two extremities of | division team willmeet thosc of the other istance from | divisions at the sume place to constitute A couple of Council Blufls speculators named Cassiday and Test in turn pur- chased Shields' title to the lund. Shields nando, and founded the Carmel missic her brother, who occupies the oftice of | cecupation, and you might almost the second in Culifornia. master of the lorse to his nephew, is an | the history of their owners. Irare o reach this ancient building, now in | extremely rude and rough kind of person- | yever make a mistuke i reading them. ay, | reporter itly eaplained how sadly the or | professor had missed the mar This was the last straw that broke the camel the range, thus making thy 3 o ruins, but still showing its admirable de mother of the Naib-u-sultanen, . back. The professor, with a look of di in the meantime had returned to Omana end toend of six hundred yards, Out- lll_'l";'rl_'n“;i*;::y}“;l'l"‘l,’A"m:)lth; plan "ll-' 1, one takes the celebrated seventeen | & favorite of the shah, (whom he much re. | Letme try it on some of these people | gutyhich no ordinary pen could por- | aud taken up his claum again. Cassiday side the ropes is a small stand for judges, 8 g h yteam | il drive, undoubtedly the most pictur: | sembleés), ranks next. This lndy also is | passing by. borrowed one dime from the and Test realized that the property would ives a magnificent gold medal, which, rked by ourth in- spectators, mmmunition and an oflicer to communicate with the men at the targets, At the latter place the men to be in the *pits,” that is, they st the bank mentioned, which is raced behind ith a frame revetn The top of this wall of carth is four feet | 10 comm que in America. It is through grand | not of royal blood, be daughte. of wouds, full of wild tlowers, every now | the maimar-bashi, or head architect and then emerging to skirt the foam The amusements of the ladies Hecked shore or climb some jutting | varties, musie, story-tellin promontory tha a_ far-off view | which they s 1 ross the deep blue s Did I say blue? | excursions in the roy At is not enough; we see a prism he ing, and the eating There passes the self-sat fied | porter dked away. When lust | become valuable, and * they cndeave v of the world. His eye, his face, his | een, he was seeking consolation in the | gred to perfect a title, Some pro- tner. all indicate that, to use a com. | foaming depths of u *stein,” coudings were gone * thiough before . & N Tan1s Hin o tat 8 s the commissioncrof the general land of- mon oxpression, ho ‘feols hisonts.! L is fice at Washingzton and finally o sort of a man whose every action vrocluiws, ‘1 T™H aent was issued. It faled, however, of am successful.’ Am I right?” | Peing perfeet and the Council Bluns men t was won, as heretofore rviam of the aid | Ldeutenant M nd be- 'H{\']‘ —— W BRIDG or Guy, V. Henry, of the and inspector of rifle practieo, nd of this competition. His ind making of sy thick, while 4t the base 1t is about fifteen # a0 Cautain Jatiet Hlio, bo i of sapphite’ now and then, and | moats and_confictionery and pickles. | “Quie corroet, That is William A, | Property Befng Purcnased for the | dupairing of waking ansihing out of the i The men benind are con side nfuntry, comma | p i with opal and cream | The honor of being selected to accom: | py P atar At Western Approach. Land disposed of it to Jolin I. foaie : the narrowest part of the executive offic Second Lieuten al axton, one of Omaha's wealthiest and 5 p - o i Tt ]l‘ ; HAAE tles B. Cochran, Seventh faliing and chang- | pany the king on his hunting excursions o205 0o oitizens,” For some time past the Union Pacific | latter gentleman commenced to disy which all the bu n\nlum "ll' 58, nm'l m{ 15 itant T m ry swell of the ocean | is much coveted and j alously intrigucd RV BRRORIN R S has quietly been buying up land in the | of it to different_individy There was consequently almost beyond the ) of oud. On rocky istands | for. When in the large glass coaches of Abal” rejoined the professor glee- 1 of litigation arising out of neighborhood of the west approach to | & &V at de cond Lieute Twenty-first infantr a deadly wmissile. Thre Fort Omaha,I was shown a Shet #1600 | the bridge. It was d y 2 seals and birds dis- | the king the ladies are not cruclly care- | fully, pleased with his fir pert l'u-nm‘.m and at Cypress Point | ful to conceal their charms from the | me nd thel question to-day as to the { one day last ¥ 4 ) AP Ay itagain. Ah, here comes another title of n portion of what wus known as g in the ‘top’ timber “of the “reverment, | (UATteRm “‘“'(.;:,‘“l‘f“’l'l“l‘;“ one cones upon a grove of ‘trees that is | cusunl European, Mest o :those who | gujiucr A, 4 ruddy, open face, that | Week that tue compuny biad got about all | Sexip-town, While Ca and Test | through which a low and miserable shot | GHCON ntry, and commissary two continents to see— | were in the habit of driving on the Gula- terous abdomen and_ that fathery | the property it wanted, and that the re- | were endeavoring to g a title Dr, Gil- i had ploughed its way, about a foot from | frst Infuntry, and commssury ofigelt | giant > trees, shrouded in moss | hak road, the drive ouiside I'che ponderous abdomen and tha EY | sont purchases were for the use of the | bert C. Monnell, Wh 5 the mayor of | the markir's head Licuter amos M. Burns, Sevonteenth | 304 flecked with - suplight, all heavy | have caught many glimpses of look. Surely they belong to the presid- ¢ -0 Fr0 T Omaha, was selling lots in S | The targets, on claser inspection, are L A s topped with arled and twisted hmbs | royal adies as their AT ing elder of the Mecthodist church, « 4 o 1ok T town proper. He claimed title light pine frames, over which cloth is ong bientenunt V. e, BIUDG | and stumps passed the vehicles of the Fering- | ¢ ly yellow-legged | . Upon inquity of the prop by purchusing from the gov- tretehed to its utniost tension. On thi nfantry; Second Licutes le’ beyond o et R JFINEL | possibiy to a bishop. Only yellow-legged deniv ate oy RATRRARIUE ) 8! ed to 1810 s R R (s SRR A little beyond the end of this mac- | his at a gallop. These lights of ‘hi and the society of confiding sig- | this was denied, wid the statem nment After a doubt Lad be is pusted a croam-colored paper, six by | 8 S T .J.’;{( Moe 11 Mt i, foncC” | adam road is Carmel mission, where lie | the harem “ure mueh bedizened and | ehickens atd the souicty 60 COEIINE S thit the depot site bad not yet been de- | east upon the legality of the city’s title y &ix feet. In the middle of this square 13 R A the renaing of fifteen governors of the | much painted, and as & rule—and except | ¥ k“ I" and, 6asy ma & od on. \lv.ml] filed the lund for entry in the 4 a biack dise, and this is surrounded by a ith infantey, | o, und the tow) of the apostle of Cal- | for their magnificent pyes—ugly. Possi- [ YOWKnoW him ibe. ¢ | Had { ¢ here and in duc course of ime | lavge clrle enclosing a smaller one. | M B. Benham, ifornix, Jun vra, who died in 1784, | bly the ladies d i th , sorlbe, 1 do, but | Hud 16 nat been for the opposition of N R snglosl mall ¢ YT ”“ “. will be p J\mm ary ria, Junipero Terra, who xu in 17 oly the ladies do not gt out till they have Tiaan atrald wou slightly off. ‘That R i ey “ I"“ ased the at governtaent prices . Phis is the target for "long range, or 600 | | Foamorrow there will be pr W | Here the first potatoes in California | bécome a little passeest or not, per I BLEAIG JRI B8 KR s | Tenth street proparty owners to a vin- | tor g1 25 per acre. He fiion confiembd tha Juds. "Two of thos urgols, ond above | prastice, Fuoadyy § '“.m‘"«vlm_.‘ i1 were raised, in 1526, a mnllwlllm'v\lu en | till increasing obesity renders carris JRARMEL o0 SRR, O 8 SHOUG along that thoroughfare,” said an | files to the he b ; sold, b :,:.‘rl‘",}:{i;.m - ant, 1n frame, ¢ “,',‘I,',‘ bIng® | 300 700 and 600 yards, On Woa(thiest, ~\;-’ll'll‘u fath- oxprolso 4 noossity. b must not bo gip: *This rather stanned the phrenolog icial, “'the union depot would have | giving to ¢ pure! 4 owarranty ) ¢ g stod to " Sy s e, 50,000 )50 or st Pers ’ " IR 8 . e 1t Wl 9 cod B bar, which may be easily tarned, When | skirwish firing witl comm and on O3, 20,00 £300), | hosed & allor even most Persiun ladies |\ j0%p 0 oontinued been practically compteted, whereas we ! | at | are fat and ugly; ¢ would be quite a Life in the royal harem tends s, perhaps. mtal team fay lh-u- will be reg and dep ss where to putit. No,” he THE EARLY NAVE : yo firing of O pand it 1 “Observe that tall, powerfully built | are at a man coming across the strect. Surcly | continued, “the lan his splendid build, muscular frame, aud | g el in this lwxp- ndicular position, one targe! is visible above the bank to'the mark f sl man. When the lutter 1d strikes | ment competition and skivmish firin, 000, and silver to the amount of | mistuke. £10,000, all of which were converted to | to fatne secular uses ten years inter by a deerce k ha show the plat of Sceip-town » g es a continuation of the city king an approach | from Nichol wu are buying now A B AT 1 o oftice charge are cou merly” the king’s harem was go - B R | s strect north, The blocks th farget, tho men in charge of the | The ofticers iu charis, aro cot of the Moxican conwress. andthe peace: | erned by the shab’s mothier, who s im- | long easy strid y proelaim him 10 ben | 4 U bl for wagons aud tho | And lots ahd siroets cORFOF 0. thoso. OF ] same turn the bar, und the struck target ful existence of the little community | mense influence with her son. She was a [ PUEES! Ty 8 § see th the ity pro only the lots are u trif is turned below, while the other, at the | ton from our people,the more so be radoly i cupted. CLEMENT CHASE tern monitress. and harem execution ‘Wrongagam, That's Rev C. Hall, | stract ear tracks o ce the pro- y PrODON, a | A same moment, appears above, The per- | of theiwr having recently come to ths p —— i WA s Aol FRALITe AN BATER RN TS | Daslar the Soutiwest Presbyterian | posed conrse of the road by this map [ | Smailer. After the dispute over the lund foration mads by shot is covered Hiso | of the world, 1 am satisited it will be & - er ber rule were frequen his | B PRNAS GO, I, commenced the plat was loft off loration made by shot is covered by a disc ‘leve P s ¢ detrac! chu have here. The route taken st from | 8 _ ¥ h i B clever woman had her detractors, who 3 $ ) 1t rul 1 17 U ¥ 3 9 . | pleasure to them to be able to extend They Met by Chance. 8 80 b e that gentleman now pass i the regular n i i of gummed paper about the size of a sil i { made her out a sort of Catherine ot Prus- Al See that g a poibt uear the corner of Bixth . H ) ver quarter of a dollar, When repaired, | ther courlesy to. tho extent of making | Thcy met by chance the usial w 0 her Qut & sort of Catierine 5 | ing in front of you.” Thore is no mistsk- | POl UERE The corme “m,f.m {60l 1t ¥ od In the o A the target is ready to be again turned to any visit of inspection |~ Dawn in fue meadow near the late, ] =TS ing him. He {5 certainly 8 minister » 10 the strects themsel ool It up unger tue Har- the &i of the marksian, beeause th | vmay be made them by our peo- | Where thrive the forus aud llow rets gy, Tt may be trus, or Tt may be false, butit | & theologioal student. That pale, spirit- | ,_,f‘hw,.q AT ey baclvs, BV :‘lm::lhlr' lhlxjn‘:;‘“la; Vil ) one which took its place has by this time B & 0'Bugn, | Abdwha birds jolb io swest reizali is related as charueteristic of the appoint- | val face, that sad, far-away | orossiug to the oast. ‘The roud will &0 | many other parcels of land are o been treated to perforation also. The someouiun apmy A calw, s Crrystis ments made in the New York custom | elare him to be to be a man whoso mind § 4,607 hloews 207, 208 and 216, most of | on what wa :n;..fl.-. wi Ak Scrip toy Jatter is brought down and patched up A Left Bower. A'spot where lovers fove 10 teet nouse by Colleetor Hedden. recently re- | is nuluu worldly things. Burely Lawm | whici®is now owned by the road. The | *"a number of Omuhs mon W ;v_,u{ i like thav just deseribed. And thus, the Foulere Stalesman, Aud blend their sonis in love's embrace, pu_m,d thut Superi ‘endent of the Barge | cor) _ rosdway will be enclosed on ether side | jargely v th Jronerty, anim:z thew work goes, quietly, methodically, with 1 met a girl upon the strect, 4 3 Oflice W halen wus asked a few days ago H hardly. That gentleman is Dr. | {008 0ne" Clls aud the entire swork being B, I "I who 13 s i‘” have carcful attention and a thorough realiz- As pretty as a flower, The dew carcssed the tiny fow'rs, whether 4 certain steamship had been | McMenamy, a well know plysician, He ane walla, uid the ontite work | boing liyran Bee 10 i3 & ) n of the importunce of the duty. Two | 1 tipped my hat: she did not bo The woon rolled silently abe Shoken, when he replied: 1 ain’t heard ytning but a preacher. Made o4 arishic & st considerable moncy on his purchusas. men work each target, one to turn it and Butlooked awful sour. Apds e § 16 huzy 1ieurs her spoken of.” Nothing daunted, the piofessor contin: MG g '.‘J.“.“'i)."‘"‘:n',‘ .llle‘ufi“u:.;mygp.:-vflw signal the shots made, the other to repair 1 felt just like the fack of elubs. P B R N - i3 Phere is another typical faes--that ~ and is one of the mos s le porth 0 J he, T o ry dence to S 3 > ) 8 he . B ! tiio euts made by ‘who bullets. These (O dnst ke e tackcar alubu, | TR WAs L o RO SO Fresh cures of throat aud lung troubles urd monte wn. Soo tht | | Colored wen provose 10 rilse 81,00, of tioalty, Moay of L9 lol BAVA bee are always privates, but they are in Durse c st b b 1 ‘Dhoy mos by ¢ b st » Red Star Cough Cure ‘e - | sharp eye, that hea Mack moustache, 0 erec nents whinglod § come ve uab al men ys privates, b y Of eourse vou know Just how that is They et by isual way make Red Star Cough Cure more popu- | sharp eye, that havy, black moustache, | 009 10 erect, eRmie, Bt 00 | §5.000 4 d 43,500 wch. @ of & comuwissioned oleer 1 felt ik el “left bower,’ Lie cow 1aliway traln, Lar, that hat pulled down iow

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