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THE EXPRESSMEN OF OMAMA, | srizory o e aiver, Toex g et | BULGARIA AND ALEXANDER. trouble is reported from their relations ‘ with each other or with their patrons, Two Hundred Men Who Are Alwags on | . THE OLD-TINE EXPRESSMEN, A Sketch of the Oountry and the the . Sowh No business or class of work has un Pri e Move, dergone a more decided change with Tinos: . Omaha’s progress than the express busi- ———— THE SOURCE OF THEIR PROFITS. | 10 IJ;-” now in the city about THE BULGARIAN QUESTION. dozen old-timers, whose express ex perience runs back into the ‘sixties, who y Their Rigs and Rates- Sunday Busi- | could never content themselves to con- | Alexander a Relation of the Late Em- duct the business under the presentorder | .oug of Russia, and also of Qaee s¢ of Business— of things. There was no scale of prices Patrons—Old-Time in those days, and there was profitin the Victoria<A Romantis ®wory, Expressmen. work, The bulk of the work then con — sisted in hauling passengers and their ness—Their P The uthenst Bulgaria is a principality of ¢ bag to and from the ferry boats - for the Omaha Sunday Bee.] | The passenger and haggage offices of the | ¢t Europe created in 1878 by the_ treaty wagon, sie?' 18 the query that | €astern roads were then located on Ninth | of Berlin, Article 1 of this treaty pro: street, between Farnam and Douglas | vided that Bulgaria should be consitituted At any person who halts and streets, opposite the ferry, which was | an autonomous and tributary principality oo re nd are g e mEocTo. s circulation following the purchase of a web-perfecting press one year ago, together with the enlargement and improve- 1 by the management to order a second lightning press from the same manufacturers. The order was accordingly given in sture a duplicate of the first press, together with duplicate stereotyping apparatus. The second press was received in Omaha two Owing to the rapid inerease of the Be ment of the paper, it was deemed essenti I8 4go A | Mareh jast to Potter & Co. to 1 has rosulted looks around ingquiringly upon any prin It y k zly i over a mile east of Ninth street. The i the ) the 1 The cipal street corner in the city. The police | expuwessmen in those days made ther | WHGCT the suzerainty of the sultan. The Bulgarians were originally of a r: the streets, and disturbing influences will | divided tnoir time between sipping lag s Ranht Y | first mentioned in history as inhabitants sometimes clear the street corners of v BRI GAIAT AtoU oY Tontars wtid !' : '. way. Their usual charge for earryin of the region of the Volga river, Whence weir usual quota of loafers and close the | passonger and his trank from Ninth stre carly morn tiil Iate at night, in all sea- | Was close and good timo had to bo mado, 'lmn.lan.--n|||’||-p) 1.{}\... """";”’m'”"’l,""‘, sons and all kinds of weather, the tr: the expressman had an exasperating | they erossed the Vol, wnd, Mingling half way to tiae ferry and making his | country north and south of the Danube uarded by the man with the wagon, the etim | out fro o 85, T i 1 ! y ¢ Wago! ¢ | yietim shell out from $2 to #5. "This was | 4,4 puilt up a powerful, atate. y bl b AL AL ) ::”.'“\“’" (1‘-”«,.‘.1.-41 for u 1ivis filoro | ninth contury. The Bulgarian nation at isra: avs at 200 oxpressmen fn | HIOIF transient or a living. ic ) garian na R sad el sl textent and power, and the woere that n merchant would ney onghly and attend to the wants of the | his customer again, and he consequently n dogroo of culture. It was overdome ze of his one opportunity L d 0se necessities constitute the express- :““ ‘7|,'|"“ his pu N an's stoek in trade. Different from U gt du bbb AL ) il Lot il ; oni) \ ed rule of | rians were the ‘most miserable and buck- sabels husiness and their extortions were unno- " s inhabitants of the Turkish have no distinguishing characteristics in | ticed, Just after the war thore gLt il R | common, but form a class whose me; at rush of soldiers through Oma it g been dis. | awakening was begun wh force may be too small to properly cover | headguarters at the Tivoli garden and i lated to the Tartars and Turks, and robbing tourists —in a professior shops of the banana peddlers, but from | to the forry was §1, and it the connection | Y ! ctlhdl bt e oIt thotoughtites Ate AIWAYS olosoly Labit of stopping on and about | with th ic tribes, occupied the expressman, in an carly day when the busine » i By T u g io tewhAL o tho businass men of | were” converted to Christinhityfn ‘the Omaha, enough to cover the city thor- | wore o resular cuslomers. The ch B izl y “ € royal court became the centre of a cer- T - . . s W alway 3 ve 1 took advant . T - Wi ncoion somsuins e onpren | S0 D Dt | IR M Tt e et TELE EEREES TUWe LICEITITIATS = s fore were | ning of the present century the Balga- acting under the recogn! -~ other cinssosof workmon, tho expressinen 2 N Sotioos Wk empire. About fifty ye way east, after h and methods of doing business vary o in the f a strong national spi | weeks ago, and is now doing beautiful work, as a glance at this 1ssue of the Bee will show. much as they do among the merchants of | SIAGKCL from the uemics in the wve e A R ping apparatus, the Ber is the most comvletely equipped newspaper establishment wost of Chicago. rved four or five | the ordniz he £ A or be fre v tion of popular schools, the city. On one corner may be fre- rs and had money coming to them in | and tho' growth of & smail but promis: f Having two Scott web-perfecting presses, with duplicaie stereof | Since the tirst press was placed i positlon one year ago, the BEr building 1as been remodeled, and the press-room has been made fire-proof. With the exception of the quently found representatives of all the | sums ranging from $500 to $3,000. They | ing literature, In 1876 fifty-one news. | Chicago Tribune, there is no other fire-proof press-room west of New York. The plant in our press-room, exclusive of the steam engine, repres £30,000. We kinds of expressmen--the young lad with | had to come to Omaha to_draw their pay | papers had been started Bulgaris are now enabled to print 1,000 four-page pavers, or 500 eight-page papers per minute. This is at the rate of 60,000 four-page vapers, or 30,000 eight-page papers an hour. the big whip, who is the bane of existence | and were invariably subjeoted to a well- | as established by the Berlin treaty, | Thig machinery has not boen placed here for more show. There is plenty of work for it to do. The Weekly BEE has an cdition of over 50,000, and the Daily Bek has | the next wagon; the old veteran with the | expressmen were the agentsand the mer- | including Verna on the eoast and Sophia | 3 0 \ ! 5 ! il ] . sorrowful cast of coun wce, who | chants of the eity i"“if tors and part- [ on the west, the state to own all the for- | pressmen ean devote more time o keepin g the machinery in good order. The first press has now been running one year without a single day's intermission and without « t 2 | a break or ident of any kind. It has given satisfaction in every respect, and the second press is equally as good. hands thrust deep into eapacious trouser | dier would be taken in charge by an | ity of Bulgaria should have a christian | Rockots, drawing consolation from u cud | oxpressmun, who would conduct him to | goveenment and a national militiuy thut | ;0 "¢ 610,000, Tho Soott press is mannfactared by the Potter Printing Press company, at Plainfield, N. J., under a license from R. Hoe & Co. The weight of the presg is cracking’ jokes with passers-by; the [ him draw his lways g a fee | ple and confirmed by the porte and gr 1 is about nineteen tons. This mechanical marvel prints, cuts, folds and counts 15,000 copies of an eight- per, or 30,000 copies of a four-page paper per hour. 1t is won. portly Teuton, whose wagon is suspi- | for so doing. 1 at the powers. The first prince was Alexander | corner; th lored expressman, who | ing tour. The expressmen ‘‘stood 0] s mbly of notabl i eullod. oy | miles fong. There arc two ink fountains, one at the lower lefi-hand corner and the other at the upper right-hand corner, with two corresponding sets of ink rolls to spread corner; the colored expressman, wha z i BXpressme assembly o abl s called, mef S 6 L e s e i it el e S s n R S ekt 5 Stops whistling or singing only to answer | with certain: clothing merchants and | at Tirnova, F 1839. The Bul- | theink on the plates. "The steoreotyy 10 print one side of the paper, are placed on the second cylinder from the left, and are inked by the inking cylinder, the one vous dr who keeps his seat and con- | a per cent upon all sales made to sol- | donin had elected deputies, who, how- | cylinder, and the other side of the paper is printed by being pressed against the plates attached to the small eylinder above and a littie to the right of the big cylinder. stantly drives from one corner to an- | dicers or other travelers run into the store | ever, were admitted as visitors oniy. | Another cylinder to the right is an inking eyiinder. The thre inders at the bottom of the press, to the right, and a little wheel, the latter not shown in ths above making him a nuisance generally, | an outlit, paying four prices for it, he | its government, made education compul- : Let a passer-by ask for a wagon, and the | would be sent on his way, and the ex- | sory and free, and tixed the civil list at | central eylinder, is the wheel that drives the whole press, - city. The ',,Ul,flx,la customer is sur- | his commissions fronr his partners, the | consists ot members by nomination, el the brother of her granddaughter, born & 4 = % - B % 1 ity T REeT i Y & 5 t constitiitesin ¢ C her granddaughter, excusable of all onr tariff miquities, we | temples of love, shepherds’ rendezvous a noticed that all the vehicle roundod and tlio bost that the city Tiia gxpress Disinoss' was | fom, and oxcofcio, but constitnto & of “the Princoss Alice, Although the AL [ huvo an ilustration of the tnvariable | Ia Wattean, cottagos and labyrinths, that funcral were the same distance performance of the job in hand guaran- ord of haviws made §145 in oneday, | members being made on aceount of their | Jiiid ot T Jety F0S TRLAERIEER | 3 ) 3 288 MLLL ¥ Al Al Only ineeRli e ey % RTF e e 2 05 Y . Sl are o . ¢ i 2 AR ol , daug] > late M hegin in extravagant profits for monopo- | practiced lgug before at 'V illes were point, nly a uneral ire Lokt Wiud s Gt Ul © 820 to#40 was considored but a falr | appointment, and the doputivs:mot only | Compte do” Huuekt, and fitled Princess | lies'and ond in idusetal postrations but, | earried on, © ‘Thore, t00. was oreated are: Who knows his_busin tions of repose and quictly await the ad- | never dreamed but thatthose palmy aays | come, but also the whole population of RSO AT OO e L u 1 . By ) w T v = 9 g BN W e D CiLAlLY A R A STORY, vidual who cannot possibly gain any [ tne little theatre has disappeared and part of his duties nowad 18 preparing vent of the next patron. “They work on | would Jast always, and most of them who | the Bulgarian principality. There once lived in Dresden a certain whatever and who bears the | its site is oceupied by a Catholie chapel, thebody and furmshing the coflin. Every of-plan, and know that there is no use in | tunities a till in the busine pegeing | tinued to disturb the peace of the country, cmploying ap 1is stafl as clerk, 8 | man. his i 3 S k ? wndit W " i e i iap B 5 3 ThUSs ) o s stafl’ as an. s is the system by which eapi- | mend it. | hand, and the trying to create business. The aw in adisgruntled manner for fees | and who proved but unwilling subjects of Saxony named Haue This | tal kias for nearly a gonaration .'*pro- 1 asked the somewhat frosty guardian all have to be instructed 10 keep J L vho s ying anged system of robbery, whic| is B e 8 ¢ alkans, | + b sir i 3 o A R} & foitia fst ipikn swlio 8 teving jonap on nged system of: robliory, of which | is bounded on the south by tho Balkans, | ¢/ titions a day, the morning edition bing printed on one press and the evening edition on the other. Having two presses, we are fortified against accident, and the stands at the end of his gon, with [ ners, Upon his arrival in the city a sol- | tresses. It was stipulated that prinecipal- The abov tisa fair representation of either of the Baw's lightning presses, the invention of Walter Scott, a Scotchman, whose patent was purchased by R. Hoe & of the weed; the small-statured Celt who | the government headquarters and help | the prince should be elected by the peo- drous in its compactness, completeness and powor. The roll of pindled at the left of the pre: s shown in the eat. This continuous roll of puper is about four ciously near the lager beer saloon on the | pense, would follow, and ther The first Bulgarian parhament, or the questions of patrons; and the dealers in the different hines, and drew | garins of Eastern Roumelin and Mace- | on the extreme left. The thivd evlinder earries the paper against the inked plates, and one side of the paper is printed. The paper then passesiup over the big central er. blocking the stre ing s by them. After a soldier had purchased | The asse ed aset of rules for | TRGne : ; . G Bl daiu QIR Byl Ly il o orolnspd | (Aho awscmbly adopled & et oL, Tulos 00 | picture, cut tho paper and deliver it folded. The upright levers serve to start and stop tho pross, Tho very small cog-wheel, under and a little to tho right of the lrge Tollers become the most active men in the | pressman would go around and collect |#600,000 franes per annum. The assembly | s—————————-—meoeoo o — aflords placed at his disposal, and prompt 1 those days, one man having | monious whole, no distinction batween | manach de Gotha mentions thelt mother, | working of high and useless duties, They | where, no. donbt, the sume intrigues apart. Lot another impor d other drivers resume their wonted posi- work, ‘The old-timers, however, | represent the locality from which they | 3 o Battenberg, il omits from begzinning 1o end, the only indi- | markable library and a theatre. To-day httle things, They are just as muc tho suilioiont-for-tho-day:is-tho-cvil-there. | failad to takoadvantago of their oppor- | Besides the Mohummedans, who' con- | Count Brulil. He prizanized the museum t share of the loss is the working- | which has no beauty or space to recom: to be assigned to its ply take eare of the work that is of that” would have been considered an in- | of Prince Alexander, the Greeks, who i wearted of Dresden china and art | tected ror its own priqute emolu. | of this once imperial domitin why the distance between the earrirges. are content, sult in the early days. 6| R DTG Fo O Dhiers b6 o S £ n al dom vhy the bl QY ) AL &t & . N U 2T > De 'nt, natior pe spaur? - Her That prevents the procession from hay- THETR PLACES OF BUSIN Hamey 11 did not take kindly to the new ment nation didinot keep it in . repairs Her v ot Ao journalist Haueke had a son, — - answer o stro mewhat vague, but the v gelng, dise o f > i ing The places where the expressmen make — order of things. Thousands of the mor 7 G S B 2 i ag L3} I : B i thoir prineipal hondquariors aro ab the Tale of the Two Alexanders, wealify and intelligont declared them: | Tt on m oo Fuvor sith o (oo MALMAISON. | pomse s casily T, o hion s Zawo “bands ‘or dologations, Thirt & 48 "Pwelf S A i 5 1 1 4 of the city, who has been immortal. Where Josephine Lived and Diod. which got its ominous name us far back i preceeding the hearse his. Dodge, Thirteenth and Harney, Twelfth | modern birth or later growth. It da country. The poorer classes of the | i K G/SAT S8 (DO tEn t TR Bt 30 \ g whick go its o me us fi : hearso. ] Rt DD e na | farib by Kosciusko. “'Ihis potentate advanced | pi e Kine in Boston Journal: T | @8 the invasion of the Norsemen in the tion to details 15 what gives a ck from the time when they we and Harney, Fifte rnam, Tenth and Far: [ both children. They © cks, on the cont Fourteenth and ¥ sed to meet every | hammedans, m ary, joined the Mo- king common cause with young Haucke 18 - soldier very rapudl, and he b me § colonel almost ninth centur and tic symmetr funeral is a , when the pirvates did so funeral the air of arti much damage in the neighborhood that solidity without which 3| went the otl ay to Malmaison, the old Y nam, and at several places on Sixteenth | year at Darmstadt. “The Empress Marie | them in disturbing the order and peaceful | kS y eldest s : Prince of | home of Napoleon and Josephine, and 5 Sl i e, s ruly snful speetaele. Some e revisiting the city of her birth to svend & | turbances oceurred also in Rasgrad, Middle Templo #4 -« barvistar. Soon | Josephine died. I had not beon there |t JoirteoRth contany ddependeney of - Hot BOTY 00 ceen ibsolutely rained by There is as mach v fle of | few weeks with her broth idor | which Mohammedans — attack the | 4 dditrley ¥ | since, 1367, at, which time the Imperial | the abbey of St. Jenis. « dn the sixteenth < 3 > ¥ afterward he ‘got=the handle to ek of proper direction. For s re: century it belonged to one of the old 1y rigs used by the expressmen asthere is in | of Hesse and the former Grand Duke rians. They were quelled within : 5 e AL | governmént had organized a complete | Century i onged. to f the ; 1 R tho spavined horso. with & ohain harness | the ider IL that, n_ order o | being kitled, the rest, after a short poor favorite did not long enjoy his now | ‘Lhe hbrary, where Napoleon had worked | S 206 FARCEC, CONI HEONER sOBE | G0 s, s many. mora of ono and a wagon fearfully and wonde be near them, he had fixed his summer | ance, took to flight, sheltering themsclves | jiono S e e e M K T o the boudoirs, the ';1“““1 PILOR R YOI ’; AL ~'|“N’[ i boF B Rstohntbalbaddbisibattans made to the magnificent platform dence at’ the castle of Jugenhem, | in tho forests of Osman-Bozar. Other | poje 2 bt sabons, were all fitted up with the forni- | Phine Beau B/ 10 /A8 90N d inges. Some di- in 1830, he rsaw. I | She was her father's memory hy *he g N1 St Petersburg to be edue: to become the wife of N;)mlmm, bought )nflally 'kmhlu(fiur ot AVE o First i v i 160,000 franes. t is a curious rectors now insist th: shal ¢ double, O RGIEE bl aiand renoRoould ot that the sum asked for it UL most of us haven't got so_ particular room to room, that the Little Corporal | to:day, nearly 100 v after, is as that y A funeral of the kind I de- would-suddenly appear and in curt tunes | With "that by Josephine, Much larger | scribe, properly conducted, wouldn't look mnquire to_ what_the intrusion was duo, | Sums have been paid for it at different | ot of place in Filth avenuo or Murray “I'he small bedroom in which Napoleon | HIes. It was bought in 1826 by a Swed- | Ihil: No mourncr, however fashonable, stept on an ordinary camp bedst ish banker, who had been attracted to it ‘ need be ashamed of it. | W tare which' had done duty in the carly agon, drawn by thoroughbred ers [ and never failed to summon near him | disturbances occurret in variou caring finely mounted harness. The | the two little Battenberg boys, his | the principality, caused chiefly by the first named style, however, predominates. nel)l_lv\vu. 3 bands of robbers, and even bashi-ba A small capical is required to provide an Prince Alexander was so particularly a | and furlougl soldiers took outtit of this kind, the value.of the aver- | favorite of the emperor that the jealous | them. The government proclaim @ | for of the state at the im) cost, Here age rig, horse, harness and wagon, not | rivalry of his own sons was thereby ex- | s and compliined to the | ) beautiful, and, as it ms, gifted exceeding $130. Many of the express- od, Thus were luid the seeds of the | Turkish government, which took meas- | mgjden made an impresson upon the men, however, have teams and outlits | enmity which has attracted so much at- | ures to suppress them. heart of Prin Alexander ot Hesse, of V | aged 5 y tie danghter t in honor of nd duke to vzh- at cost them from $400 to $600. tention. One day at Jugenheim the litt] Previous to the meeting of the congress | yo(he > Jate empres dussia, | filled with bis old clothes and Rolcheitsethaisiapolennatidthotoa (Jaeiind Bncaking abouEiio CHIoranCe i e Buttonborg boy, seated on tho czar’s | at Betlin, the Britiah s Ruscian gove. | rotber of the Juto empress of Kitssin | ) i iis favorito hooks wore thown | g IS tremendous discomfiture after | fancrals, lot mo tall you a good deal de- All classes of men coutribute more or | knee and toying with his orders, asked | ernments came to an agreement respect- | jowever, in consequence of this mirry. | 40Wn as it they had just quitted the in Waterloo, for s""f,"'“] hundred ‘,'“’“"’"“l pends on the nationality of the deccased, dess to the expressman’s support. The | the name of one particular star, * “It is | ing the terms of adjustment which they | ji tonenth hin, tosive up his Ruesiay | Pationt mpe i, which they some- | f and in 1842 the property, much ‘Ihe s much character in funerals as merchant whose business does not war- s of St. George” answered his | would accept_tromuthe congress. Th ror ot Tothrn 1 Cormany. I Do | times did in a great hurry, as Napoleon | Fedt 8l amaschisedioys Merini{\thorodain thoos A TILIANONEEUURH NS rant_the keeping of a delivery wagon “a cross you will wear on your | agreement provided that Bulgaria should T his wife received the titie of Prin. | Would piteh a hook even'out a traveling | {hristina for 500,000 francs. Napoleon | as different from a German tuneral as the ned to find anything | 1IL, was so anxious to get it, and in it to | shamrock is from sauerkraut. A Ger- rmony with his own | Perpetuate the memory of the man whom | man funeral usualiy has a tendency to be notions. During his “Austrian and ased to call his immediate re-# solid. It is compact and slow gmn(f. Russian campaigns he had a hght ear- that he paid, in 1861, 1,500,000 | An Irish funeral 1s just the reverse. It e flitted up with a compact library, | francs for it. It is ‘believed “that the y moves briskly, almost jauntily, comp and it 18 said that one of the duti an procession. Its si furnishes numerous jobs to the” express- | breast when you a Russian gs:neml be divided into two provineces: one north man, and many of them have yearly con- ave won your first victory. the Balkans to be endowed with a po- tracts for thelr work. The young men these words of his father's the al autonomy under a prince; the who are coming to the city, and those | czarewitch turned away, impatiently er south of the Balkans, but 10° to | Bylearia proposed for the hand of here who change the location of their [ muttering so as to be heard: “Of course | touch the Agean Sea, and to havea Chri ',m” ss helonzing to one nf‘(lu-gr«-u‘: rooms from time to time drop many a | all the good things must be for Germans | tian governor and a government reigning families. Although the lady e if he hap I wus not in s of Battenburg, and gave birth to <01 time ago Prince Alexander of S of the | Second Empire spent as much as this | with tho Gern quarter thay goes to make up the ‘ex- | now.” W to that of an Bnglish colony. Further, | Lerself was not adverse to” the mateh, | didede-camp who Sollopsditiisionin mg'f‘"('l’.i'l')‘u““:;ig\|‘.”' “r['ulfi:i‘i'f:';\" ] :'::'s',l.':-“zm e |;‘rl="‘:n;;‘ “Iho an'a ingome, ro you not a German your o British government reserved, among | fer oy tomuit i jdoy, oy mittells | vas tho rescuing from the mud of the | BRI phalzemiciecane: At ofmorbid aonression wilie pressman’s income. Many of the ¢ y ¥ the British go nent 2 | hier parents scouted thé iden, telling the St Empive, There were no hi same spirit which makes the best of and are kept | asked the dauntless little boy. ““‘German | other things, the right to demand of the sonattending | blood flows in your veins, imperial high- | congr the participation of Europe in and conveying | ness.” the administrative organization of the T'he ezarewitch never quite forgave or | two Bulgarian provinces, and to discuss npered | the duration and nature of the Russi worn roads of the time the books which Napoleon shicd into the air when | ¢l museums superior to th ¢ ) ; he distikel them. Malmajson was dread: | Now the eollections ave all dispersed; | Irish funeral. Then, too, Irish funerls fully ett up during the. Franco Gorman | and it is probable that Malmaison are not marked by .. The vehicles 5 but little loft of | shortly become the home of some generally toss , hap- Wi vod deal higher be- rmitted 10 mate w took th remarking pressmien have carryalls, usy during the summer ses the wants of pienicke passengers to and from the ball park air grounds. They reap arich harvest | wholly forgot the retort of the p ¥ mourning ava wake is noticeable in the : suitor he must rise | fore he would bo pe | their danghter. ‘Lhe prin bufl in good part, merely q b bne an | “Vepry well, then, since you will not ac F, and to-day there 4 X 2 4 dyrlds 4 . during fair week. trryall that will | child whoi in his heart he considered as | ocoupation of Bulgariu, A oI TR RO oldfashioned country honse. Sowe | lish, or American, or othor for Nty st SoExbd) [ ten persons will make at least five [ an objectionable poor relatic HE BULGARIAN QUESTION nyself a king.” This | 0fthe rooms are so unsafe that vistors | family, and that tho house wi com- fand they wi ntly he Out of the enormous | of ev n gardens and rustic ted. ‘There is no ! sl known style “and~ make, most clegant landau to the ram- kle express-wagon, with oceasionally was the first topic considered by the coa- gress, and the lirst to be settfed. e final decision of it was made substantially trips a day to the fair grounds, making | never was then or thereaft an average of 5 fo! each round trip, or | lost between the cousins $25 for the day’s work. Some of the ex- Negro State F 00 BRBLO Vel pletely e At the Lime as_ a mere 1dle | 276 requested not to ventute on th a8 N 1 e ent | shaky floors or under their ancient ceil- | Park at | A0 ‘,1“{,'}“;1;}_"‘“‘ nder'ssubsequont | g 0" Not a book remains in it, and the | Fetreats ar from th vaunt, : to be cr ; ; enteryp| ince something monument anywhere in the hamlet to [ a man on horseback here and there i o ‘ g v o agre ¢ roncierge w 9 s 3 3 J Z ¢ in the pressmen have provided themselyes with PRy ottt on the basis of the Anglo-Rn AZTC0- | of the character of a prophcsy. copolorgowhoishows Visitors over the [iHISAUMERTE ANV OIS L LY e S : especial facilitics for moving hoyschold | o N; X Fre e O ot | ment, and_establishied tio new Bulgari prophesy fiogo dawells with a kind of forovions e, | perpotuato the memory of Napoleon, | lino, This, of course, docsn't apply to auspic of the upon the mischiof which the | Oddly enough, Josephine is most spoken | the funeral’ under tl AR pnduizotane. R S1am headquarters oficors did during | 0f by all the local guides and the _guard- | Catholic chureh or the vamions, Hibern- nomons province to be called Eastern iy more disustrous chupters in onr vir long sojonrn there. The beautiful | 1808 of the quiet churck at Rueil, in | ian socicties. Irish funerals u[lhl:n class Roumelia, and to be governed by x Onris- | tariff history than that relating to the | park into which Napoleon uscd to jrhich the divorcod empress lies buried, | aro alwass carofully, oven elaborately tian hospador nominated by the sultan | copper dutics; there is none that exhibits | from alittle drawbridze rigged over w I the “visitor dud ‘et dnquive for Na. | conductud. = 8o, also, are high-grado and the Powers, who should” be nided by | more directly the - essential immorality | moat directly from his' private bedroom | Poleon L not one of these guardians | Gernan funerals, in which the best bands alocal elective parliament, and sapported | and the certain results of ultro-protec- | is heing parceled out and sold to the rich would intimate that he had ever existed. | are often to be found. The German goods, and find plenty of work in‘accom- modating the great army of tenants who their places of residence almost overy month, But the servant girls form one of the expresman’s most profitable class of patrons. Their name is legion, and they all ve trunks. The “Want"” as before mentioned, the territory sonth he Iniquity of the Copper Tariff. has of the Balkans to be created intoan auto- is the activity displayed by the colored people of the south to show the people of the country the industrial progress which they are making, This activity is show- ing itself all along the line. = Arrange- ments are now being made to hold indus- trial fairs in Arkansas, Mississippi, and columni of the DALY BEE are an indica. | {8l fairs in 2 Mississippi, and | 3,5 50001 mlitia, the higher officers of | tion. There was : in the first place, | landlords . of the neighborhood. The Y e particularly fond of the sombre musi < tion of the servanu girl's Jtineracy that | North Carolina, and onois talked ‘of in | which must be approved by the sultan. | tho slightest exen a duty on coppor, | magnificent alley of sycamores which | ABOUT FUNERALS, the dead marches on such oecasions, provides the expressman’s profit. By heir contmnunl change of employers the servant girls have become known to most The Turkisk government was given full | The sole source of domg and entire right tooceupy and cover the | fifteen years ago, was th line of fronticr separating Bulgaria from | mines.” Thesc could have be tie supply, up to | leads t ateéan is now unkempt and | while Irishmen care more for banners Lk Suberior | somewl Tate, and there is nona. of | Obsequies Now Superintended by a | and msignia. Froneh funcrals are ore ) woked | thie'oldstime life or gayoty ut ison Paid Director—New Methods in dinarily small, and the corcmonjes are The North Carolina industrial associa- tion has become a permanent recegnized institution and has held state fairs for a of the expressmen of the city, who are it g Eastern Roumelis, to be used exclusively | to advantag competition with | save when a joyous party of litterateurs Practice. erformed with as much haste cney I R B o F S R R Biimber pfaparsDagE: Tio best men in | for frontier service. The province of | the world. But the owners wanted a | or painters ponetrato the old domain’ on | New York Mail and Express: *hat's | will permit.” Ltalians bave liitle mors kitchen mechanics and are frequendy | e state have thematter In hand, and | gysorn Roumelia as defined by this | monopoly, and when every body else was clous wity to Bougival for row- | what I cull n_solid: funoral,” obsorved u | paticnco for the dotails of death than the ablo to discount_ employment bureaus in | 1 o!fPASESHOCHSSOS Ao & guarantee that | 4o,y has an area of 18,661 square miles | haying a taviff slice they got ing parties, Grand strect funeral dircetor, asie stood | F'rench. Their tunerals, in this country ich: will be inaugurated at Raleigh, November 8, to continue five 11 be all that its projectors hope nt and ly insignific room in which | at his window Thursday afternoon and | at least, jare usus and a population of 751,000, The major- | Still, under the orviginal b Iher last. [t was as | watched a pussing procession with the | common-placo, ariff, Chili to the litt ity of the Bulgarians were anxious to be | ore could b imported, ana there were | Josephine breath providing this elass of household help. 5 ND WAGES, pressmen of the city b 3 eeiors MOP6 | iiicorporated into a state embracing this | large smelting works in Boston and I teand forlorn as thut of some old | eye of connoisseur. *“Ihe typical American funeral? - I'he pays a license of $10 per year, producinz | for it The Aransus ussociation bs con | wihola nationality, and strongly opposed | morc. Tiis id not sult the minoe own. mansion on the eastern const of | **May [ ask whiat you mean by a ‘solid’ | American funcral is the hardest of all to A revenuo of §2,000 yearly, which, with | fFolled by equally good management and | 3"y vorurn' to'Turkish rule. . Lhe discon- | ers at all; and so, regardless of the fact a. Life and thought had gone | funcralt imquired & Mail and Express | elassify. Sometimes it is one thing, some- other licenses, goes into the city school | i T HOWOTY, Y DO PYE 1 yont of these people over the provisions | that the whole country asked o pay It seemed impossible to believe | reporter wio stood close at hand. times another. “The solid funeral which fund. The le of charges is also fixed by a city ordin “wwenty-five cents for the delivery of a trunk or small parcel to any portion of the city, and this in a méasure does away with the strifo for business and forms a tacit agreement among the expressmen upon a division of passed here a few moments ago was an Of late 8 the al bas been” growing mmetrieal and artistie: Ivance in methods and change in how | customs have done much to improve the much people i general don’t know | American funcral, and will of the Berlin treaty aggravated the dis- | a tax for their bengkt, and of the farther t.in the suite of rooms adjoining wer I'he funeral divector smiled with a orders with which the country was | fact that the smelfing industry would | once assembled the most brilliant col- | wholesonled and expansive smile pecul- Stato fars, They ot only show swhag | dready afllicted tion sigmed | bo utterly destrgyed, as it “was, to | lection of French pocts that has been | jur to funeral directors. “1suppose you the 15 domng, but thiy enconrage | LY 00,000 Bulgs tod against | build up” the mping industry, they | Known in the last two centuries, Jose- | never noticed any espeeial difierénce in AT vt SRR Al 4 ::ml«ht\_lsmn of nnl‘ ! Kul declared | asked :fiml re 'iu iu)m«;z; an merease of “hnn-, Im{l 2 :illntrfi';w :_ul;(-'nlll:xkz :l]lnnll | fuuorals, l' he mlhl' ~“\.-n. !h:llf ;1}.: wiy iy ety 1o S 5 hat after mne months of Russian occu- | duty about equal that from 5to 25 per he court of the future dictator the liter- [ with most people. 1s remurkable Tespeotful attention of our white fellow y Juss * 19 R eD by on ‘of Eranos: Andiao. bnt. to: han We know of no entorprise originating with us more to be encouraged thar these - I oltizen pation they were opposed to a feturn to | cent. After this gopper min! ‘ i § 2 ! 5 eventually thae territory and the business thereof. iThe zealiand fdality dlkplavod: by tho Turkish misgovernment. a close corporatitn. ‘I'ne companies [ little country seat men like Bernardin de | about such things, "Not one man in a | resultin well-regulated funcrals for all The nuture'of the business, size of loads | NG/ FEGECHY HEPIREE ,I‘;?“““_ THE 1 T combined and set an arbitrary price upon | St. Pierre, Ducis, who tortured Shuk- | thousand has the remotest idea how a | classes.” and length of trips, does away with the | I IV EVELE COT L BIHRE BEOE | Alexander 1 e of Bulgrari, is the | their product, ‘Phis every American | 8peare on his procrustean bed; the elder | funcral should be put together, beyond | “What are the advance m methods ordinance, however, and m: a matter of stipulation. To the cre the expressmen, be it said that the g are seldom accused of making exordltant | the Rhics | colored people of the south is not only commendable on the part of that great paper but encouraging to the race at rge. son of xander of Battenberg, | consu brother of » late empress of Russia, | that th. and was born April 5, 1857. His moth abr born Count Von Kauck, was the | far b ner had topay. at he sume time | Legouvey, Joseph Chenie o same companies were sclling | Duval, and Girodet. 1n tl i their surplus product at prices | poets, all of whom wer low the Ape n market. The | manners and certan distine Talma, Picard, § the necessity of a a hearse to | and change in customs to which you wake of these | earry it, and some ¢ to follow the | yefe men of fine | hearse. " That's netunlly w1l the vast ma- | s phe advanced methods of bhandling n inlitera- | jority of people think'is required for a | (he dead. and the change from the olde charge too often the case with | aca fat by i " danghte former Polish minister of | wag d were ghose fixed by the com- | ture, always followed a number of vretty | lirst-class funcral. = Why, sometimes 1| g,500008 "0 & ONe Or NN their brothers, the hackmen. Most of | 4, Y these fairs multiply in the south. | WS i R N D U Rl it AT AR 2 faslnouod ouwam of having.ong.orsite the oxprossmen do business on their own | $¢ UTe MilX OT 1o PIOZICSS We | oss on her morganatic marriage with | the mining companios were mmong the | Besuhurnais, who was then a dazzling | buried at all.” g IMIRaCinle. 1o iy o AURGREUG AR account, though there are several compa- | o1f L0 Bk SARLON, BHG prOLY of Hose. Tno prince of Bulga: | Iargest knawn. Lhsso enormous profits, | crenture of. 18, th Countess Fanny. - ho “Probably some wouldn’t if the matger | PEIESTIRENR FIRCEIIES SVEn G Tl S nive that conduct an exclusive express | Py proguess is RoAoUIH: > second son of this union, his | togother with the dgseovery of other de: | sister, and a host of ladies of rank and | were left entively in their diserotion. But | {1 N0% 1 hat is Teft to the funeral business. Onv of these operates a ling | ——— or having entered the posits in Montana and Arizona, caused | fortune who, in the intervals of tiie elash- | yon haven't told me what a ‘zolid taneral’ | g oior -in t, overything connected between Omaha and Conneil Bluffs, an- | Some Striking Changes in Jonrnalism. Alexander. the wining busidtss to be overdone | ing of swords and the noise of politics, | means.” i with the funeral, from furnishing tho othor controls the trunk and bagzage | A new “blanket” sheet is to be added | the last Turco-Russian warin the Rus: The price of the motal fell heavily. The | helped to honor the muses. In these now | “Well, a solid funeral's a mighty good | Wit Ui et ¢ T business at the depots, and a third docs | to New York journalism, The star, which | army, acting part of the ti ault decls . duty was cut down in 1883 from 5 to 4 | desolate rooms Ar harles of Rou nts per pound. But overproduction | fables, . Bouilly read his 1 | place you must understand that a funer; 1 a Uhlan regi- | continued until something had to be | Legouvey recite his poems when | can be made up with as much artistie modeled after the Sun, will, on"or about | ment. He was present with Prince | done to restore the magnificent divi- | Bonaparte was pounding up and down | skill as a fine picoe of architecture, or it imed hig | kind of'a funoral o have. Ih the fivst | fon avossing th WY o oo { geave dug. Thus, the family is relieyed of all the paintul cares of preparation and z an «-\\:I!h’i\u light ‘parcel delivery busi- | has been run since its resuseitation by | ehe on the staff of Prince € ness. The wages of the expressman also | Mr Dorsheimer as & fonr-page paper, | mania, and also serving come under the head of notable variunce: oar the first of the mo the 10th inst,, becularged to an eight- | Charles at the sicge of = Plevna ana | dends of the past. What s the remedy? |-Egypt and haranguing his soldicrs as to | eun bo thrown waether as carelessly s a oo o0 ':,],‘,‘;,‘,“"“[.:?m'“‘,.,“}. LA are niumerous, on picnic days | puge paper. The reduction of the price | erossed the Balkans with Gourko. Soon | Mines are shut down, and hundr the speetral host whieh contempl. zy quilty A solid funcral is one thyt is | i d i u s ! in the hands of one person; provided cturning to Germany from the | men will be thrown out of employment | them from the tops of the b, made up with some regard 10 symuetry | s ot he b ittt i’ tive one, but it has its dull seasons. cents made A serious inroad inte the m) 0 he was transferréd from the | until the prico has been Taised | Josephine was working with fominine | of construction, like the one that just | ¢oie? " NON st cnoneh 1 & year's work the expressinan with a one | popularity of the four-page two-cent | dragoons to the lfe guards. He was | agan to the level of the profit | zeal and acts to rally about it thosespirits passed hore, Of course you didn’t tuke 1, Lorse outlit will probubly average $3 to | journals, of which the Sun wis the chief, | elected hereditary prince of Bulgaria by | that the manufacturer requires. When | which still hesitat Had it not been | in the fine points, but that was o funeral fuir weeks, the business i of the existing eight-page papers to two | after ntand compi- 0 he should be eflicient in a strictly husiness sen He e . f Xy 3 BT " f ‘ g must be & oman of educat A expers. .50 per day, with an g ording | Tho enlargement of the Staris a reeogui- | the assombly of notables, ut Tirnova, | the market was good, laborers received [for her work at Malmuison ho would | any man might be proud tohave. First | fhis! 06 sl of wlieation wnd exponss . 1o his fucilities for doing business. Somo | tion of the demand thus shown for quan- [ April 29, 187, and by vote of-the grand | the ruling wages, not's penny more, and | never have been able to undertuke the | came the hoarse, then the doublo car- | {5y ! Such o man will win respeet and contidence and bring an unconscious but genuine solace to the bereaved wh le furnishing tueun the M0st approye of the Omaha oxoressmon are n very | tity as well as q comfor able ewenmstunces, though the | line. The gen of them only ma Jfi(\v to pro- | will not be t ity in the newspaper | national assembly, Juily 13, 1851, he was | the tax levied on’ eyery user and manu- | 18th of Brumaire or to become kirst ges, then a few single - vehicle pral stall of the newspuper | invested with extraordinary legislative | facturer of copperin ‘the country went | Consul. He sincercly grateful in nd most eluborate conveyunces eased, 1t 18 said, but the rowerm He avpointed an honorary | to swell the fortunes of the mine owne: those days to Josephine for all thut she | the hoad and the smaller ones in the rear, the fol istives | local staft will be somewbat enlarged. | knight of the order of the Bath in Juneé, [ When the scramble for these prohits ove: had undertaken in his behalf, and uoth actly on the sume principlo that a skill- | o6 cin00T (0 be had for the money Wyl : ttle or nothing | In this conncetion the rumor is interest- | 1879, does the business anda times become bad, | ng pleased him so much as to visit Mul mison building a pyrimid puis the 4 b e ide for a rainy day. Like all men | ing that the Sun contemplates either a Thus Prince Alexanderis a distant rel- | the laborer makes the suerifice by being | maison and rest there from his ambitious | largest blocks at t se und tapers oft o y who work for an uncertan and unfixed | similar enlargement as soon as it ean | ative of the Russiaun czar, deprived of work and cutoff from wages | projects. - Josephine tried to make a | in gradual and regular luyers to the Dic J. HMeLean's Liver and Kidnoy X Tate of pay, they regulate their expenses | put in the requisite increase of press [* Queen Victoria is the friend of Prince | until the monopoly created by the tariff | new Trianon at Malmaison; and in the | smallest. That's one important ot | Pillet ¢ o remedy and speeilic tor Y thoir income, and gre mare apt 1o | facilities, or else the roduction of its price | Alexander. He is the brother of the hus- | sces fit to resume business park, which will now svon be lost to | Then if you had known anything about | eh Liever, mildin their action they ave a surplus on the expense well vegulated funcrals you would luave arv i Lo ke wn il G, ide of the | to one cent. band of her daughter Beatrige, and also ‘ In: the history of this, perhaps the least | view, she had built all sorts of klosgu