Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 19, 1886, Page 7

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19, 1886, ~TWELVE PAGES, 4HE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER J 1 ' J 1 played by Miss Clarke, in late years the N 1 truthful assurance that there were snak AN TIOUR WITH AN AUTHOR. | Boiidhown ionding tnay ar saia tventte, | STORIES OF ~ THE - RAIL, | 15 \iank i, coatom inapectot.por ¢ o wdroon girl, was played by sisted in oper B, there was more ex o Cutler, A long time a Aol _— elte 'n(\\'m :\)ru mouse in A '",“'"{ r}ir:-ln v s Ot “Uncle Tom's Oabin” and y v 1 Towa Engineer's Remarkable Ohase after | could make. giher timo he had his The Cr % 'H‘ “ Harth rr11 L s 1 HRHOM f the > . N 3 trunk packed Bidor by ranli pressur b et Home in Hartfo steamboat | 8 g with small pioces of clasties, and when M m came out - they wonld mt=belicve bim, though he g ks and everything wasas | THE ~ RETIRED LOCOMOTIVE. | told them the truth about what the trank BURLESQUE STAGE CHARACTERS | realitio as posibi i 4 contained, th fi.‘nm; of the lid ro | t t i y t rs. Stowe w s sulted in an afiliglt an explosien of elas P S — " | ¢ r attend t wain 10 rece | o, - jos, o ¢ Wis of the inspeetors = Displeased With the Modern Dramatic | (O e e Cvay | Tall Yarns About Baggage Smdsners | UE5 S0l e BIERS, 06 1A swciors ) Version of the 8tory— How the Aun- tently atta She | The Free Pass Fiend—Train Boys | most broken belore they got them all . . the Husband Once | is now but | and Female Railway Guards. back ‘ iI 11 1 t t o t )k f tho Play. whon in the maod trlis na heightls as in | “Fite moangeb fhing T over know of a W1ll ClOoS€ outl my entire stoCkK o oaks at | her youth. She is t and slender, and = man doin cgagemen was done by | ] y i S | quite good a ‘.\,.yn..q and as active as | The Dismantled Engine. | :\Il hic j i Ho hadd a trunk ; one of . Vier in Boston Globy Not loi mint your 1 | Side-tracked and sifent these paper and varnish sort of things » o Lim Vi in Boston Glube: Not long | seyros oo | SRS R | B pare st e, & ot 50 per cent below cost. I . | I t “Uncle Tom i i | he was to blama for having su 1 o ! at a pretty brick house I gables 2t th, o tR Py 0! 1 " or-nothi I K " Aoy | angles, painted o quaker gray, wile | to the theatre, snd eng ,.\:.“\( e aeting he valloy §oviTe 55 1Mt SYGH. IV s WiHond_auil CLO \ rre e ring ines, over pore ane nd scen 0 o st axte ¢ pro- | : Arsighted, reed and ge tion of b: s <l < 1ot Whese divall Mow; Hasriot asotior | 8 saw anything particularly foreeiul | worn out. powerle Al when he went traveling—and he went a S $ $ oo, whe 4ol M Harit Beeoba | 2k 2ok 58 et o | Lo fovacion, o i st | CLOAKS, ac ual cost $4.00, at $2.00. | ( B T s : . e | Wife, “just as you made them.” Then | With dead-drawn fires she stan y s instead of a trunk., It . embracing velvety lawns and bright ' they enjoved the comments of the audi- | And everywhere the corroding rost, had no wheels and was just a heart CLOAKS aChIal COSt $5OO flt $250 | flower beds. Just around the corner | ence between acts, | Eyen whim the welloiled pision breaker to handle. Of course he had to ! ! ! lives Mr. Samuel Clemens, or Mark “One could not lielp Bit Teel pleased,” | Shotswittly in and out, is rust. »ay for extra baggage all the time, but C S $ $ Twain, whilo the adjoining estate is that | said s, Stowe. # “Fhiope 1 was not 160 | yye eountry sonool-hoy, books foretting, 10 didit mind thit, beeatse he ‘had LOAK s actual cost 600) at 303- bl R 1 dai0s WREAEE proud. Thoss were very happy days, | Dieoountry sehoolhoy, books forcetting, plenty of money and could afford to be C 7 O O et DS WATHEE e ot v | FHLOE 10 b an poasure, s wel | PRS- | B LOAKS, actual cost $7.00, at $3.50. 1 reavement in the loss of her husband. | ¢ Work. BT i ¢ climed to hervant cab anc An Ola Pass. A ¢ Mimics the man who once drove her, - ¥ We sat in her cosy, old-fashioned parlor, COCKENOES ISLAND, Thinks of her ancient splend o Chicago Times: A curious and inter- - 3 where the books'and pictures are all TALOLE e Ehe stsep Bracies esting Tello of 6arly railtoading Was ro- Lot of Woolen garments at the same per cent of reduction. Inshort souvenirs of sweet memories. The pro- | 1t js Said to he Haunted by the Ghost | Andspining along the levels, ceived yesterday by General Passenger . . . fossor was upstairs asleep, o _she o CliktTie Nosw, Greeping across the bges, Agent Ruggles, of the Michigan Contral. | £ 20Ell close owt my entire stock of general merchandise at about the knew he did not rxn»full her. sk AT People tell some strange stories about \-Ily':_f‘.“:“:"‘l'l'lfr“_h':lc‘!‘l'".":'.“»»_l It eame in the shape of a letter inclosing . o . . 9 her ‘in_the ' proty parlor sat her | Cockenoes island, &' protty bit of land | i g ap the stutione A puss issued to G, W. Cartis and lady | S€e proportion. Auction every day and evening until Oct. 1st, || Ifi\'m.llz\u ghters, Miss k'u-]t jand Jliss | containing about tventy acres and_ situ- | Whistling at the stations, over the Michigan Central road from i R e o, | ated three miles fo'the eastward of this | And resting in the round house: Detroit to Chicago, and was dated in £ o conversation fell upon tUnclo Toms | place, writes a Norwalk, Conny, cotres. | Struggling through the snow storm 1856, or thirty years ago. Mr. Curtis at [ ] + Cabin, nml.'n?‘ was de sirous of hear | Loniént of the 3oston Globe. The island | And damaged in the collision. that' time was selling tickets for the . Lnxg‘ Ivn;rsm kl”u l‘ at 1.\} i.wl.t “4 ”1 has had the reputation of “being haunted |y d Michigan Central at Winona, Minn., and ody has rea tho book. 1o not think 1| y"uio'ghost of the 1-fatad Ind Charlie | Jon e 3 dgthroned monareh, after receiving his free transportation ever u..-lnpuw,]}who__ »;.ull. | readat all { jics “Snd for' years it has been unten- s O Kreat glocy departad: | mislaid it. It “coming to light among who,was not familiar with 11" (4 mrs, | 8nted save by partios of campera out, waits for her utter extinetion. some old papers last week, he promptly gmf‘_""lf‘,[;,“t Y RRGWIOE #othis. Who aVe Wt LllehUlelZie el “"“"“‘f“l o Chasing a Shadow Sty SR L Stowe, 1 some ave | unfortu ierman boy who was founc Shadow. vilege. This was promptiy granted, . " . " meyerread it ised st hor | Mouting in a wator logiged boat two miles | | AS the engineer of engine ssistant General Passenger Agent F. 1. G114 and 616 SOUTII 10th STREET. | Whot | asked, qur])‘nl».u”l hor | £ om shore. Wabash, pulled out of Given, Ia., en | Whitney replying that i case the n q"‘:'l\l\‘!:m"m\‘\(‘ll\\: ;‘h-:\ ‘l"{‘;lr';"\‘;;::wm“y h A \luu which is devoutly believed by :‘uul«: f(_»r(Illm!m\'u one ev v[nn;:. rec "”’ii ||1r\.~s h:n% not l‘(‘[‘"l\ (! :|\L_|Im xpir ulm e = == = = e = ST ! \ the 0 pla 11 people living in the viemit and | he noticed what appeared to be a small | of arother period of thirty years the n ATV C oD | 3ides and currents moving aro hose i tho dramatized version. Lam sure they | Wit o fones: of ' Ross lie | animal lopping along on the track ahead | company would pramise 1o aughin renew THE LUTINE'S TREASURE. | %5 ML b o el ] ver lave, or they. would ve o buricd in some portion of the island, and | of the pilot. Gradually he increas it. The letter and old pass will be framed splendid Lutine under a nearly impene- | Kitowleiz of the book ‘and within a weok something hus happl speed of tho locomotive, but tho little | and proserved 1 the ofieo us a velic of —_— | trable covering of sand s00k," she © il ‘ which has eaused considerable excite- | quadruped seemed also o have “dropped | old times. o a: i Twelve years elapse v o treasure : hey depict Simon Legree, for | 1o i otithants. another noteh,” and despite the tremen- A Pioncer Railroad A Searh Beneath t.h? S MY ) \113.:‘\'\!:: RGRE l‘nl‘:»i:w!:;, |‘,‘.1":>r'.)-“ |‘Il“I.:;-‘lIi““ instance. : N o e g About the time of the excifement over | dous 7 easily retained its posi i p AR AR e ' % Millions, |oEtita W My Diatrar Ay | “Let me see,” Isaid, “they make him | g0 i an i n N 4 S i ribted! be: . § The first railroad lo, that of the wor Mr. Pierre ) Y e kidnapping of the boy two hard | tion. gusted beyond ¢ ion the | ¢ i Vi Wy | governme icial residing s coarse ang brutal with red flannel | ook aiz1zens were often seen on the | engineer began heaving cb s of conl | from Buffalo to Niag s opened government oflicial residing at irt, a wide leather belt, into whieh is |\t Tiley occapied a ho it, but all in vain. Itscemed to bear | {Jsttifty years ago, on September 7, 1 The Famons Lloyds the Moving Power | o L et k 1 knife or pisto, a black beard and | yumains standing. People who visited 1lite and suce y baflled “}:hhv el ol the oarly railrc in the Enterprise—A Vast Sum ‘m.»‘f.ln',hf' ;q{;"rx::g-"f";"}; ;rr':,l::;n- Jhdlis y & . the island were peremptorily ordered off worsot the engincer aad fireman | V33 desizne Recovered but Much Yet AR IBN A GRIBUIR ORI BN VIR Gaa KT ' s Stowe, “that is ex- | the place by these men, but anumber of | to check its wild carcer. For twen LRty LU At i Bri Bt o dlnc e iy him look.”’ isitors to se to be Secured. and many others that the s still to enable netly the way they do v chased that delusive people caught a glimpse of a little boy | miles the engine and turning to the description o wag | dealous care, and they - always strove to | up the at Ottumwa and stopped. whils on the Ameriean sl bat | The foreign dispatches, referring 10 | gidorablo outlay of oapital D Legeo, read the following: e WS | gor him out of sight a8 quickly as pos. | The object stopped also. With his pick A L L e ; [nstFAnos. matier) ofta i kil ! short, broad and muscular, a round bul- | Giply wheneyer anyone visitea the island. | in hand the engineer made . sn ngs had been made. The r: some marine or insurance matter, often | to recover it. Having obtained ||u; s:ml(-, road was therefore intended to divert | comment to the effect thatnothing further | tion of his government to “or that “Lloyd’s'* | scheme, tie sued for, and was granted, % state aid _towards the prelinnary ex- penses. From July, 1814, till the end of let head, covered with sti i i The great anxiety of the men to keep | the animal, harmless but pos burned hair; he had light gr Vi th | the boy ont of sight aroused suspicion, | such anomolous migratory pawer: a shaggy sand-colored yo-brows, ike | and thie men and their prisoner were at | quick precision he bronghit the pick down Iis hairi his faco and hands were freck- | gnee connected with the kidnapping | full upon the animal’s back, but “a sick- . wiry, sun- 5, with trade from the Canadian side by aflord. ing a better access to the falls, A few years after the line was opencd a train is known at *Lloyd’s hold the loss as final, or something of i ne v ' o i g e American in a | yo 2 tls Vetherlander i fed. 1o wore brown pantaloons of thin, T e iimaLislon i Was run from Buffalo to the falls in_one | that sort, Yet not one year 1892 the Vering Netherlander | light colored matoriai, the worse for wear | “Riiny attempts were mado to got a | and it s W bndn ho aross. honet | hoUr. 0a feat which excited consider- | thousand knows what “Lloyd’s” really | continued his efforts; ho spent upward of : and dust, wnd n cliocKed shirt, wide 0pen | goud 1ok ot o oy bur ey fanud | forth 10 be & raving maniae. Bof & full | wble surprise a the time. is. Even in England tho workings of | £5.000, and recovered only seventeen h coins, nine of gold and eight silver at the neck,” Further on in the book it [ &1 varty, consisting of three well- | hour he had been making desperate ef- that mysterious body, famous as it has | speaks of his sandy hair and a long linen | g own citize i 3 o living, | forts t capithat A ¢ bd American Fables. S 5 ATS| | In the meantime the by members of 1 nd a white Panama hat. }"ml‘..‘i b .(:\.u (‘1‘ “h})\‘; ; 31"".“‘2 ‘érp o -“f,"" ""'. I| t."”‘?,‘" ‘"w| (}? gl.ur_ Istroit Free Press. "f"m"’e' aro "“l"Y‘pc.u’ unde r’.‘f’_'"“ fi Lloyd’s were not wasting time by the N / { TR BtEwe ST reasad bl anded on the island one day and hu adhering to the headlight, and the discov: bz The London Graphic, in a recent issue, s Al L 1 Y I Yes," said Mrs. Stowe, "L dressed him | toned to the house, Their approach was | ery and reaction was foo much for his THE BATS AND THE MIOE. Lo O P L los's’ convays bup | Rrolitloss practico of :lamanting a los b y| southerner and made him blonde. | ypobserved, and they attempted to get | already shattered nerves, A Rat one day went to the Owner of | says: “The word ‘Lloyd's’ conve Nevertheless, while writing new *risks’ had a certain similar man in my mind | jngide the house, when one of the men, — the House in which he had taken up his | little to the majority of Englishmen. | and steadily increasing the commercis Handli s 1 wrote of him, but the actors all dress | with an oath, blocked the doorway, and, . The First Train Boy. Quarters and said: ; They have a vague idea that it is some- | importance of their socicty, i iy 2 him like a western borderman, withsom- | \oh,pping out a knife, threatened to stab Chicago Herald: “The first boy that ‘I must Emphatically Protest against | ). conneoted with shipping, but | safely presumed that the underw 5 . bero, red shirt and high boots, and make | the first man who dared to cross the | @ver sold newspapers on trains now lr the way the Mice are coming in here to | UNIM& I cobrEans | had “notforgotten the existence of the | i Lim of dark complexion.” threshotd. The party had not come pre. | in Chicazo, said a train boy running be- | Disturb us Rals. Our Patience, I assure | Whether 1t be a steamship company ot | great wealth hidden away at the bottom Ill()fl erll a llle So we went_through several of the | 't o Nt recention, and | tween Chicago and Omaha. “ICknew | you, is Completely Exhausted with the [ sailor’s boarding-house, they donot feel | 6f the North Sea. Negotiations w characters. *St. Clair,” she said, “I| {0y beat a hasty retreat. % him quite well. He is known as Colonel | Bold Faced Iretruders on the Domain.” competent to assert. They see a column | opened between the two countries relative drew as the bappy, light-hearted, cul- One day the two men were scen leaving _Hurr-,\shbg]' proprictor of the Metropol- “‘Ah! but this isithe first time Lknew I | iy, the morning’s newspaper, printed in [ to the lost wreck, and many schemes | Why not try it? Only responsible tured southern L:g'l\!l"m:m. with all the | the island, but the boy veas not with then. hotel. Ic is a New Yorker by birth, | even had Rats,” :eplied the Owner. unpleasantly small type, and purporting | Were started only to be abandoned. The partiesneed apply. Ior particu- v elegant ease and indolence of I S, | One or iwo men immediately set out in a | and in his youth, v back in 1845 or | will not only Make War on the Mice, DoAsARL | 7 itis of no inter. | £overnment of the Netherlands made | /00" Gaares clothed in the extreme of fashion, but in | 5.t and visited the island in the hope of | '46, he was educated in all the branches | but on the Othker Vermin as well.” to be news from Lloyd’s; it is of no inter- | §,,),5rtant concessions ostensibly to Lng- et K. ) southern fashion, so nt from our | finding the lad. They reached the old | Of the Nes York hoodlum’s trade. He Thereupon the Instructed such Vigor- | est to them, aad therefore they proceed | and, butin the reality to Lloyd's, re- northern style of dress, particularly 80 at | house and found it ~deserted, The | had at that time a companion now | ous Measures that the Premuses were | to digest the police column, which is | lative to the salvage might be recov- ”NI[]N MAMUFAETURINE [:[] the period the book represents.” 5 premuses looked as though the late occu- | known to fame in horse racing circles as | soon Cleared of ‘all Rodents. never very far off. That is all the knowl- | ered from the Lutine. Thesc nogotiations ' . “Did you-have some one n your mind | yants had left for ood. rything had | ‘Lucky’ Baldwin, who was at that time a Moral: The Quarrels of Oflice-seekers | g, possessed by the general run of our had dragged on for many rs, and not SAGN ai when you weote pf St C| *said L. Joen removed or destroyed: Not n trace | peddler of second-hand books among | are the Salvationof the Tax-paver. Il y e i old institu. | till the spring of 1830 were thev completed. 209 N. 15th St., Omaha. | ~ 4 * gho answered, I know just | of the lad could bo found. The men did | Dewsdealers. Charles Bash. an old gray- THE LION AND THE INSECTS. countrymen respecting this old institu- ©aj. “pigrre “Eschauzier's company and ! such an elegant, easy-going man. 1 wish [ y6t come back, and the story is that the | haired conductor on the Hudson River A Lion wus_RcsL‘mf in the Sun one day | tion.” The same journal contains an | Lloyd's combined to attempt another at- For this purpose a special bill ynssed ¢ T could see him upon the stage, st as T | child was murdered in the old house and | road, and who was one of the first em- | Tacitly Permitted a Hornet to Alight on | account of the organization which is full | tack on tho sandy stronghold of the seas, | in pariiament m‘,‘ipu,e‘ 5,000 b’,.(.me n, but St. Clair now 18 | Lis remains buried on the spot. Many | Pl s on the very first train of carsthat | his Nose, but Vigorously repulsed a | of nteres Brietiy put, it may be said | but before operations wer Bty iof 4 ol | > 3 et S y i s the property of Lloyd. According to the '8 ery other man you meet.”” | parties dug up the dirt floor of the cellar, | Wasrun in America, s a friend of | Wasp, who sought the same Privilege. | that “'Lloyd’s” is a great marine insur- | the important political cr calculations of Mr. Pierre Eschauzier and Then she went on at leagth to diseuss | byt without finding any trace of a mur- | young Asiby, On his first trip on the | Thereupon the latter observed: ance corporation, which dg;uhors the | supervened, and Bel Mr. Hill wh 9 590 \puz SES the inaceuracics of tho productions: | gor, Hudson River road Ashby took out 1,000 | *“We are both of the same general | shipping news of the world; and which | from the Nétherland i ] ,’" Apliat AR “’;;‘;"’"r“’ | Why, they have Haley and Tom Loker | ““Tiug other day an elderly man, poorly | Heralds and Tribunes and sold every one. | Species, and I tail to sco why you Dis- | has 4 curious history. T s Tutas buclag et the Ssonyini b i hobuobbing with Legree; they are miles | and roughly dressed, rowed out to the | Hethought he was a rich man, und when criminate Against me.” TABLE AND BELL FROM THE LUTE ests of the underwrite; of the old war-ship the enorr 0’" sum of | apurt in the book. They sellom nowa- | island und ~visited the house. Scveral | be returned w New York he boughta [ “Simply to prove to you that Every | Many vessels huve become well known | Dutch company being practically tied by | £1.036.000. This may b soume fatre days introduce, Lam told, the incident I'| residents who saw him declare that<he | new suit of clothes and went on quite a | one has a Right to Select the Nuisance | at Lloyd’s either from especial success | tne uncertainty hanging over the futu Sl ";'Sh‘"r‘"gm it _“Lll";«! like best in the book. bears a close resemblance to one of the | Spree. The rosult was that he missed his:| he is to put up with,” was the reply. and froedom fromgaccident or from some | aotion of their new _governmont . he | | , nearor far, be surrendered by | i i i ent. To | t most fickle element, the sea, and | What is that?” I asked. two men who lived there so mysteriously | next trip, and ‘Lucky’ Baldwin got his Moral—There 15 a Difference "between | pecaliar mishap. Of these the most im- | make matters worse, the indefatigablc 1 ,' 5 L) “Evw’s fall overboard from the Missis- | yours ago. The old man -drew some | plice and business. He then sought | the Hand Organ and the Accordeon. Portint hias boon the Lutine, o vessel or. | boliovor in the bossibility of maci B i o Hiso i rtine SolproyaamdbioR, &ippi steamboat aud her rescue by Uncle | Hlans of the house and made some rough | Other pursuits, and when the war broke THE SHARK AND THB FISHER. iginaily captured from the French by Ad- | Lutine, Mr. Pierre Eschauzier. had dicd | suscossony, - iers of Lioyd to- their DoAY it well played, | Measurements of the cellar near the east | Out he entered the service and became a A§0u|| Shark, who had been Canght | miral Lord’ Duncan, and so intimately | during the course of the negotiations, T ————— Mr;\m&::}_ ,ui-“r:i‘l‘gsjr see it well played, w::}l. ;hu man left as quietly as he came, | colonel. ina N utIAE'nwnhfor Sl:xmi‘ ,swas Bewai mf.mccwfi is_her hIEl(GT)" with t:m'- of | and wu]h him was removed all the re- Learn a Trade. ; . Stower DAy and refused to answer any questions. v . ing s Fate, when the Fisher picked him | Lloyd’s that itis worth giving at some | straint he had wi P laid ational Pittsburg Sunday Traveler. “Yes; in fact 1 never saw the play A eyt ‘Women as Railway Guards. 2t} i 1A Ly Iaid upon national o far, 4 i s own | i g ately after the old mun’s visit A 4 up and replied: length. rejudice and jeaiousy, The res was The farmer who tills s own farm and — through but once. Thut was sears ago. | some young follows wemt 1o the istnd | _The Prussian state raitways have for [ "RAHY PG o0 voone w00 winn | T Lutine was the swiftest and best | Rn dimost total eecrsion pSy Seult WaS | s no rent to pay is the most indepond- | ,l‘;?”r'.'.:fl::figdi,;"’t‘h}f'}fi).?'Ui,f;f :m:r | and ot o cl]lrimity commenced to dig ;‘;‘;‘r‘;‘1‘;}‘;&;”5;;'3;:{;’{3}8:‘l’:l';]‘f:‘hgl::;‘i‘: never be anythinz but a Shark. “If I cure [ manned vessel of It)mfleuulm‘;lur :\gmlrnl ings, and it seemed e if the iilfated | entman in_exisience. Next to him is | performa “ Ye- | pear the wall where the mysterious e k., ok PRUS; you as a sardine and stamp a French | Lord Duncan in the year 1799, and wus | frigate were to be foreve: e chanic who is a thorough master | maining @ short mo and soeing the many | Strunger. had taken measuyements, | BUards to give their wholo uttention to | f{hei'on the box, you may be Praised for | for that reason placed by him at the dis. | *ge MOT 10 be forever forgotten. craft. It is not vouchsafed to ovor: | inacouracies, I did not oaro to remaln | gnd thoy unearthed a human. skall and | e kooteou HonRohasxondhed FhollbyonmiFlavorilies posal of the treasury for the conveyance | ;G e Years later, however, owo ENg: | young man to inherit or acquire a farm, | through the evening. ; several hones, so they said. Their story | Service has been divided into two parts. | “pygroupon he sent him to the Factory, | to the Elbe of u large quantity of specie | 1 0“4 O the idea of attempl- |1,y sk voung Americans can learn & | Then she told me of a visit she and her | i3 accepted by SIS oh | namely, in track and crossing service. % rond Nahot PSR Py i were z, heir own account, to find the i ; 5 7 | is accepted by the townsfolks, althou, P 4 3 and three months later a Railroad Nabob | and bullion; also, such mails as wer e s trado. I I s the pos- husband made to Boston, where they saw | s those who say that the bones | While the former is only done by men| i, Gyrio. o] S Hitha Mo v Sr el hat ti ¢ war | 105t Wrock, and with this end'in view vi i . e | . DALY W FOTASRI W | there are those who say that the bones o q in Chicago picked him out of the box on | ready. England was at that time af ited the N sibl armer, thatguis tho play of +Uncle Tom's Cabin,” us it | they dug up probubly 'belonged to tho | tho latter, consisting ohiefly of oponing | ho Lunci Counter and Dovoured him | withthe Netherlands, and the newspapers | i3 IO NGaoriands, | Ruther ta the str- |y an ot be taken was originally at the Boston museum. As ) 8 e and closing of bars and the lighting al it s or] Y “gilyer | Prise of the government of that sober | . ofecti e dog the two men used to kcep at the : A Zating. with the Remark of the period state that the “silver T | from him a defective title or | Lwrite, I have before mo the old play | jsland. sweeping of crossings, is donc by women | ™ w101 those Frenchmen know how to | coin” was destined for the payment of | pOSHEY theso two men had the hardi- | i titly sh deprive the agrieul- | bill, which certainly is full of interest. | “Several old residents say that the ap- | ~—in most casos either the wives or wid- | ¢ up Sardines, eh?” our troops in Holland. A careful inves- | 1920 to petition the king, without further st of his fand and leave i “Uncle Tom's Cabin” was first produced | poaranco of the lad who was kept a pris. | O of guards. On the passing of trains | PN OR PV S Coce 10w when | tigation” of the admiralty records, how- | 240 Jfor the required permission, and, | on*tii, “syorld s useless a8 b | g ny stago, Monday evening, Sopicn | gner on tho island. tallias. exactly with fhese women, baving Dlack and red | wy are best off. ever, proves this statement to be eitirely | 10 F s S thenoordod thom, | withont soil. The " advantage of - | er 15, 1852, u ed by - | the description of the curly-haired” Char- | Scurs their walsts and arms, e -——— erroncous, and there can be little doubt | 4% 107 &€ 00, ithe od o learning o trade that will render | H. Conway, - & gentloman of | loy Ross, as printed in tho newspapers hol«,lugzn fan nghaignd Sprolfofslend Within Eight Feet of Wealth, that the bullion and bar-silver were dis- ‘J;,\;:},’}":‘f;‘\, "If,"l"j racious conom | one independent has been amply demon- ormances--# se days a remarka ievo that he was murdered on the island, L - H0:30 nig J. Brand of this city. assi his father- | burg for purely commerciul purp Ll Sl ll L) 1 | governments, seemingly as stable as tho O e ciomas aoc fomn "time iy | 20d Will muko uttompts to. clear up the United Btatos ourrenoy), in-law, Mr. Thoss, now decensed, to open | All that hown of these merchants 1 Ten ot loE ko oy als, Nothing more, | Focie of ¢ Giby tar, came down with a roatost on lasm, ang me. mystery, ey - up a quartz mine in Calveras county. The | that they were connected in some man- = : B ot of | erash and turned thousands rearcd in the 1t has reappeared always with suceess Elocution in the Primaries, : s, defined, and on the surface was rich, | the whole of the fabulous wealth on | py /i Res 8 tormant energies of the o unprovided with a knowledge of T'ho vorsion given at_tho musoum is Burdetto in_Brooklyn Eagle: The | 115ve traveled wido over land and tile, yielding s high as 8310 por_ ton. Thoy | bord the ill-fated Lutine was insured | pteh,compauy of silvors, foanded by | o0 Wiich distinguishes the civiii irely y i it AL i o | stage through a lonely land, ) g s b as $§2 @ I 3 o Luti A 50) Mr. Pierre Eschauzier, w 4 it 18, st ? e o s, Blowe, Aq | smariest man T over suw in dharge” of | Oi the camels back ver thiodesert trick, | erected a mill‘and expendod considerablo | there, From caretul caloulations mdo | blacod'“omsuivss i’ who forthwith | pun’ from the suvage terrile [ the time the | was produced Mr, ;‘IL':“HLH“V;L‘\ -l\:wnn[ ol "i'“m;.‘lu'( am | [lave ridden through Samarcand, money in fitting up a plant for perma- }ri !\{lr. Eschau \r. lxind[ con!ltln_u ‘r_v with Lloyd Mha iyt (T l’vnl-h ni\'nl\nx«m of 1 3 MO 8 nar. | nof Ca d or anythin, his year Vi o er sinki V] Lloyd's agent at Amsterdam, it is esti = TR’ s v g istoer: William Warren sas the great comodian | imyself. conseruontly T asod <ho. shsr | Through the Folar snow with the Eskimo, | hensworking, Alter sinking down fo s | Lloyds agent uf Alnslertain, 3 1 e | Augvst, 1857, operations were ngain com- | &6 Trench aristoorats on e e g e n | nyself, 1uputly [ hronghithe Molas snow wih o comsiderable depth and taking out a num 1 that the frig i s B L el sourecs in toreign countric i thorefore (ho purt of wPenetruto | take down “genlal old German_’ from its Mo ablgbal- | gan to change from he \'y.sulllvlnm-uml mander, Captain_Skyon, was well |yt O e O oL e | privations and the rambles of the revolu- fon ih for him. In all pthor partieniats | cusey pigeouholoy Vover the Rhinoftin | yyayoridden through fields of alr. arado swhitetbarren quarts,. thocadge kouwn for his sterling qualines a8 a sea: s o s Ll Son tionary enrthquake: uat shook Europo O ARl alis e ] . The voice e meeting pitched to the east, and, according to the | man, and his great and varied experienc il iy N IO OT, mdueed not only the nobility but it closely follows the novel, The ol her against the chairman, and he | In alonely "ve ri e f North 3 v gemeny vouchafed to - these 1 i i i B et Bl S against the chairman, a p a lonely boat ['ve ridden afloat mining rule, the pay chute should » | of the North sea, At dawn on the mo it ; sovereigns to teach their - jul ¢ “‘1-1‘\"‘-:;\.3“1‘:-‘.““,’.';‘ t, but he didn't hear it, 11 the midst of a stormy tide: BN B e Y 8 Ao R Ay | O e e e it AT (o trizate “rf- ri()!" 3 l{:‘,"‘xlwh‘ldf‘[“ [ aren a” wrade or somo c‘:‘;tl AGILL G oe ‘ };fi{”;(fi'&“ moohugjy "mzv_ o ol Eyandann liko s Guaein & palace oar, S\l]»)»uwin::ll\f--xi h:u]i gone (m,-{l...,_;n.‘ g;.(, i' I“from Yarmoutn roads, bound “for | ;1 W S Aad wand, which had for s0 | fu) .-nlm“\-nn.n):. ,\},,\. zur(' ners who s wers nlavad by the follo 47 3 $G to_d o south corner of the chute instead of drift- | the Elbe. coniers, snddenly sirre g come to these shores from Ce; ; Ahy\uuu X \\“:‘.h’; l|)‘|ltllrl“|‘4'll\’,“l:(;‘;. '_‘“'“‘_".'h ofle N “1. by ‘11“: Inujor d | My expericnce wide bids me this confide ing north, they sank a shaft further up Bofore the news of her departure OOTIBES, AR "llna‘li_v“r"_. In‘;:d ‘nln“' are masters of a trade and find no diffl I AURORL At i Ty B (n;‘rm utions offe I{ud by the mi- | "o i hearts and the brains of men, the hill, morthward. Here they found | reached London the splendid vessel was | gy ge W SR ERIVISES ARESEE € BEREN ) culiy in obtaining very remuncrative em son, (e ey e QR R T course, you know, a primary | If you onee get n pass you will never, alas!— [ no ore, and after spending considerable | & hopeless wreck on' the shifting sand | SCo0 P 200 L AE SURERWESS BHCE 08 58 | ployn Amcricuns of the pust goner. P PT RSy g X 2y | “'Over the Rhine,” in the city of McLean- | © Nover pay for a tickét again, y they started another shaft still | banks that guard the entra to the [ {FEROS AOrGRS The Sorth Sea in suttih | ,¢50n seemed not to be fully alive to the b l;»F P'nlm(-‘rr-l hllg_{:l'emt:fl‘lln act Io, is ruther mere German than a mass e north, and with the result as be. | Zuvder Zee. Of the two hundred per- ‘b.“ [:H\ to the Lutine was discovered €0 | faet that riches.take unto themselves wjhusv. B, X aluiar ol )mis\m_s; ot;"xcl:’é n;zdn.{ Ber Well, every vote was e Trunk ¥arns, nally, after prospecting for nearly | sons on board when the Lutine sailed B 00, our of tribulation e o Lokae and “nein” vote, and the chairr ew York Sun: “A day or two more | two years, they were obliged to abandon | from Yarmouth but a fow hours before, riy in September the news reached young men of the fam- wardrobe at the museum; Tom Loker by ays contrivod to make the majo 8s fresh as this,” said a veteran trunk | their entorprise. , Mr. Thoss had ex. | only one escaped with his lifo. Ex' | Lovd’s that the treasure laden wreek | fig with perhaps oly o slight knowledge 4 8. F. Palmer, and Marks the Lawyor, of | squeak out the thin “‘nein,” while tho | juggler at the grand central depoton | pended neatly $4 v : ¢ ¢ I sroy of the | bad been found and some trifling salvage | of IDFSARE ALY & B R o Inte yaars ih most versions made ' the ueak ¢ ' )t ) K 1 deyp pended nearly $35,000 and Mr. Brand had | posure, however, to the mercy of the | i una i 1 2 #5¢ | of bookkeening, or some other genteel R A e P T T T minority roared the good, mouth-filling | Wednosday last, or rather anight or two | spent all the mongy he had, and besides | Waves proved too much for hum, and he | efected. NMr. Hill, Lloyd's agent at Am- | employment. 10 escape from the humil- Y opart, was played by a Mr. Ral- | “yaw!” An obnoxious motion would be | as cool as to-night is going to be, will | had worked li sl died befs hing Eungland, only liy- | Sterdam, displuyed the greatest encrgy | iy heing vhere the T ton; Uncle Tom by Frank Whitm: q s i ) iad worked like a slave for two years, | die ore reaching Eug] . y liy: g intion of being poor, where they were for- 0 - . 4 an, 5 ) r - D ac rom the N o Ve o] ing * broken account of e ¢markable operations, and was orly 2 pany e G Wh for Imany years was idontiied Wit | tonances Gf Che pprondusive misonty | Couniry in allS diccetians . sl | oy became, avolved in debt.’ Mr. | ing fo give s brok L B e nakmia by e v emiens ol g | aetiy aflueah, many took Horans: Groa: Sl ol i v villi q & A 3 & Cf , o all | Thos ¢ Was 5 orifl's s isaster. rely ed by the government of the | ley's” udy P vel v 5 il)w }_‘Of,l"l" muscum in heavy villians; | waiting for the chwrman. to come to tho | have our tidal wave of baggage. ~Yes, | and tne fawi %‘l«‘fifi‘fl,}‘.‘:}i‘ ';3 ame| Sirho 16th of October must have been | Nethorlands, When the recovery of th | 16 i he ““l‘l‘nul‘(\(jlm vy ,‘u'fl“’f rover John, a party never uppearing in | front. = He was alwuys calm, slways | I've heard that story of a man who put ir finaneia irs we srne bad d; loyd's, wh he news of | treasury reslly. began the excitement | w on ik olvos, willl the modern versions, was played by W. | Waa, v l:h their financial affairs were concerned. ad day at Lloyd's, when the news o gan - th with men like themselves, willing to Jpoduoters Yersonsswas i ot W mad]v. always ‘in battery." Rising | an anaconda ina trunk, and when the | “For twelve'years the mine lay un- | their joss reached the underwriters, and | A1iong the usually placid isianders was | work for very low figires. The forcigner s S, .. Sol Buith. | slowly to his foet he puj the question | blithe baggage burster toyed with the | claimed and Wus' idered wi the wreck of the Lutine doubtless meant | 52 intense that a gunbos as required | who started o VoS! 3 2l remembe: e L : q n us' considered worthless. 1 who started out west with themr on thy He is well remembered as a fine actor as | with ~ impressive, hounest del frail pack: d . y to b i s well us_stage manager of the museum “Al} ‘\lunu.sna, houest deliberation. | frail package and it gave wuy the snake | Two or thred yesrs ;%o parties, who | the wreck of more than one man's savings, | 10 be in constaut attendsuce to maintain | sume train in a second-class got im- A Laates mas it oA S - ulu wnml in_ fayor of de- %nn&urnut and squeczed him to death. | probably had ,.ofiem-n of its history, | the result of many yoars of patient in. | order. mediate employwent at from $2 to §4 per Serefle do 85 o by Mr. J. | feading dot ralsolution will say ja And ['ve heard the other one of the man | relocated it and commenced the work of | dustry., As usual, the Royal Exchang About midsummer, the divers while he of the first class was g enetrate Partyside was Wil- | “Yaw!™ baw y i ] ra artyside wa “Yaw!" bawled the exultant minority, | who had dynamite packed under the iron | deyel 3 TV A L o | was ahead of the Aduiralty, the news | brouglitto the s hell ¢ y 8 or 1 1 The saha arren. Gearge Harris by the late | i th for %, ! XS y A evelopment.* It has developed into or ead of the i f the 1 2 e &nrf bell of th o $10 0 week. The meelanip . leach, who wis nlso manager of l“lf\l‘l‘ Toar _l"l‘ ll’nu‘ e the Iu.n flicker. | corners of kis trunk to catch the profes- | of the best pices of mining property being officially confirmed only the 10th of | Lutine. The sand bad polisied the gre ves enough to buy lot, build a the theatre for some years. St. Clajr w All opposed to defoad the resolution | sional trunk destroyer, and the first time | the country. But the thing that interests | October. The underwriters promptly | ship’s bell clean, and it was in the same | house and enters on a carcer that leads L 0 ¥ . - Clair was | say neiu Nein!" thinly squeaked the | it dropped—the baggagemam, oh! where | Mr. Brar 2 poi oh | settled with the insurers, paying as for a | perfeet stuto of pres: 3 hat wild | bossib! ) W p played by litle J.'A. Swith, who was | exasperated mujorit ot hy e Y TR W% rund m that the point at which tled with t ) ¥ & B | pe L sty pre on at wild | possioly to alth and Flontitiod with the shuracters of fops. | oopgrated injorlty. er r.uil:u'ulmn asha? Dut there 1s no truth in them, | the bonanza re-discovered is just | total loss, and then ‘prm-efl ed to investi- | vight sixty bef when its last | petenoy, while Mo 15 now an old man and an inmate of | shey d 0-‘1 fl".' [ laznmlmx_muum the w d don't see .th‘ut the{ con- | eight feet sout where he put in’his | gate their chances of recovering at least | note had been knell of 200 a- | trade tinds the Rarrues home. P hiladeinnia, omad :'ro\::' I:‘l‘(“l'l A\?lr‘:‘flpd R huwls ulx the taln 1‘1:]-) !qu m%lusr. Lsn'tour hfe hard | Jast blast, and'af'4 greater depth. Had | & portion of the great treasurer embedded | men. Amidst the restloss come position with plenty Iying sround willing Of the Indies, Miss Louise Gann, after. | chon ‘; oY um_:x roN ns_lrlL;up hant hnuu,.: alread yl without having such | he run eight feet ‘further he would have | in the sands of the Zuyder Zee. The | of everyday work the bell now st 1 to take his place for loss. In the presetrt ‘ wurd Mrs, Wull Frios. Whose. husbeud | thouts of [l'nll]nth:‘clh)ir -“--?lu' no 11119 x]u: :‘ngg esied to some crank who | come into the pay ore and would have | agents dispatched to thespot failed, how. | the library at Llosd's; around it ed | day, however, it 15 not so easy Lo get tae \ was A member of parlinment, played “.-“fi:’ YN Mlllheo‘l‘ }?v or & h"" {"L : lr them or ml reality? I have | Jearned that the y chute, instead of | ever, to regain anything, and returned | a picee of the rudder chaing e | ehinec 1o Je a trade, ns the workmen, Eliza Harris; Miss Isabel LN A ' ways g A on Lhis | becn told, on good authority, that a bag- | following the rule and pitching to the h the news that the Netherlands, with | silent tokens te!l o the busy through their unions, restrict the employ- g e el a‘\ixemlfil"liwn' l: side, I don’t remembor who he was or fihflfilll-‘lll uamed Martin, on_some road | jeft, forms an exception (E the r‘;lle and | which ecountry we were then at wur, | cloguent tafe of the s 10 4 cortain pum of apy |li ,fi; clress, wils A hloe, ere ho i v 9 x s OB 3 xce v th T, ) p bo se ers 1o 4 cortain 1 f a0, anconn Seanes, Jras A "foens | prhere ho is now, waybe Unele Loo does, | down south was killed otlg timo by u rat- | pitches to the righ claimed the wreck as their rightful spoil. | becoming green and ru \ {and fow are thorefore cnabled to ward Mrs. Thoman, now living i P ought 1o be guraraar io. csnake that some fool was sending —_———— During the continuance of hostilities | no number of y: t fturther. { enter &5 such. OQur young men conse- - north in & flimsy trunk that by i i q | mont in 8nn Frinolsco.. Caly. & - i 'y trunk that burst open A Reading, Pa., drug clerk, annoyed | the shrewd fishermen of Wyck and the Lloyd's shure of the trc re recovored | quently grow up ignorant of the use ol ; y think! | Dr, Henry Wile, of Atlanta, has been | when it fell from the top of i i i e . Mclen Western was the originai St i - om the top of a pile of | by some little boys, caught one of them | nexghboring 1slands turned” their atten- | from the Lutine amounted to upwawds of | tools, and have (o stand wside for ever, 4 AUREITI GNATY -aas LA ¢ ll- 4 “x; lr)m[_’lu’r a long time llo curo the sealp | trunks in a car ~But there was no intent | and painted his fip with oxide of silver, | tion to the fishing of bullion instead of | £25,000, and in connection w (]l]l for 'ny E 1 3 20, but was, wi wout nine-, i v Vi Y | a6 08 . : n £25,000, = D i o e 7 her bistor Lueille, & prominent netress. | & baby, feil ,L"‘l‘ffil',f,':lfd‘,'.{x:xw:“’, l:‘J;‘I’l'; to hawe :2:’:32"{,*"“:.:“‘11’3:" n'“g fl}zu‘ When the boy tried to washit offit turned | gathering the rightful fruits of the deep, | is the most remar part of the prok _ abal Dear old Mrs. Vincent was young und | that iiver healed, Ho deolded to sgive | that it did Tho fact Y D bum act | black, of course. His mother nearly | and displayed such ewergy in this new | The underwriters had sutlere 4 r apital and aliens slender then, She was an aotress ol | the girl a new scalp, aod said he would | stories you re (¥ s "' 2’ th the | skinned the lip rubbing it, and then | pursuit that it is estimatod on good | loss of the veasel w and go is to remedy this defoet and g every leadiny and hoavy parts in those days, | have to take the skin from some one's | sions of oinind me of arcadapled ver- | took her son to the olevk.” He put on car- | authority that they recoverod —abeut | policies themsel. avisicd, ‘the | hoy an opportunity to leamn 4 trade, but ' and plaged Cusslo in the first produetion. | arm. Fho T s.cousin. & Drave: bay. ot | has 8¢ -rnv oecmenculin Erlflnce. bonate of soda and that made the lip | £83,000. Two-thirds'of this gratwituous | very building even, “risk” | to learn it in such & way that the work of % Topsy was played by Miss Minssinski, | twelve, st once bared his arm, - and® the | mote thin m:“ Lr‘lvafi:' '.‘ne to | smart and the boy howl. Then she got a | harvest were appropriated by the gov- | was written, had been re to ashes | the apprentice should net lessen the 8 who not only played rollieking parts, but | doctor removed twenty-five small pi - 2 “"P wl-:mnoi 0 ront‘l:lll' warrant charging the clerk with assault [ ernment of the Netherlands, the remain- | by a disastrous fire. The woney wi r the continuance of the work of : « was eng to dauce beiween the | of cuticle, and placed them o the h‘wud hmlm .“ah“md s ”:: exaspera and battery. der bemx allowed to the salvors as their | clearly the rightful pr Yurtv of Lluyd,but ] wle mechanie. This is an econos 3 vieces; . wheuover, as was usually | of 1. Both childres went hotae | and l’fnne nnznn y h»"’ impertinent — A share, About a year after the loss of the | as the individuals could not ¢laim”™ upon ion desocving of much consid. A the case, 8 drima and faree wero | woll picased, but the boy's ‘father was Om“fi;:.’ mduh of hml bag- W. J. Perryman, of Thomaston, Ga., | vessel the Wyck fishermen appear to have | it, the only course open was for the so- | eration in these days when the struggle 2 ven. ' Miss Radinski played | yory sngey, ind has sued the R e e ;han"o :lng‘k‘&l’ hfu'n et owl that consumed two pounds | abandoned researches, partly be- | csoty to take possession of it with the end | for more existenes 18 yoarly becoming y " 4 son. rewonst: shstan ¢ ) IQimai Sud ok 0 fi.fl.g &‘jr while Little Polly was ! assiult und Lattery on his dootor et TS VLN N "‘qu A :‘ resh beef, five rats and four jay birds | cause they sup) the treasure was ex- | in view of seitling such indiwidual claims | narder and more conlinuous smong 3 ! 3 ’'e one meal, bausted, but chiefly because the restless ' as might thercafter be clearly proven. : ¢ without mebuical keowledge ¥

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