Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 10, 1886, Page 5

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1886.~TWELVE PAGLS. MAYNE BROTHERS, REAL ESTATE DEALERS 1519 FARINAM STRERT, Lot on Saunders street, near Cuming, [House 4 room foot lot, one block [T n McCormick's 2nd, $650 cach Fine lot in I lace, ( house 7 rooms, barn, $6,500. from Leavenwo on Grove street, 250 House 6 rooms, on Leavenworth street, £3,000, terms, .ot in Hawthorne, #1 §3,500, lots in Davenp Two acros In Brookline, $1,500. from Saunders str Four lots in Burr Oak, just cast of Han- | terms Lots in Thornburg Place, £330 to §700 Lots in Mount Pleasant, $200 each cach, House 4 rooms, Ne n's addition Fattle's sub, §3,100 3,500, Lots on Irwin’ streat, in Redick’s Grove, n Bartlott's tion, 1 block from | 8 s ear lin 1 Lots in Kiiby Plac ) § Acres in Newport, £300 to $350 eact Lots in Housel & Siebbins® addition, 3 | House 5 rooms, good 1ot, Orchard Hill, Lot in Bediord Place, near new foundry, | House 9 rooms, ba sisterns, water | Fi $1,000 each blocks from street car, §1,500 to $1,600 [ g1 <00 0 wh wor 2 lots, on 20th stre « N and ofie loton Howard stroc each Ause Joty 1 Dalvedare, §890 U5 4800 saoks | . Mary's ek $19,000; : tenLptathgne gl i) 1'.[‘,‘. in ‘|~‘1..m\;, ,.\,g«l.u). 000 ach Hotisa Saon & HI ol on, $1,25 vo lots on Leaven 500 o ouse 10 rooms on Park avenue, $5.700 l,v:‘:‘.!y\, Jogzgs & Hill's addition, $1,250 Il“ ‘1“x|‘mym|‘;“\1.",v‘.\. x:.].”l‘ }:‘»h. Houso with 4 rooms, lot 63 sing | etanies 6 vobms; on. Coltus _l;w £3,600, | One of tho finost acres In West Omalia, Houso and lot in Horbach's 1st addition® | Three lots in Lowe's addition,$1000 cach, J ©n Culifornia and Cass str Lots on Georgia avenue, $2,000 each 6,000 on 13th streot, §3 60) Twolots in Mation Place, ol Lots in Dwight & Lyman's, just south of {House 7 rooms, barn on 20th street, [ Lots in Orenard Hill, 8550 to §750. House and lot, S, 17th street, £3,200 Oine and one-half lot on Farnam, near | Hanscom Park, $700 each. 20 Two store rooms, cottage, lot and one- House 4 rooms, lot 99x154, on 20th stroet, 27th avenue, house 9 rooms, hot and |Some nice lots in Hanscom Place, $1,550 | House 22x30, 4 rooms, E. V. Smith's ad one-half, on Donglas street, $16,000 £3,000. Sold on very casy terms. cold water, $0,000 to 2,000 each. dition, 50 Ten $1,630, fthe finest residencos in the city, at, Richat Tildon's addie 000, ! 15t opposite the new foundry, s on Saunders Easy torm 5 rooms, 8 lots, Walnut Hil each. Basy torms, near 20th stree 500, £2,950. 4 fi Slark Place, 87 R s 1 Mayne's addition, only 9 miles Lots in Clark Place, $725 to $1,9 SN SEDI0 & S Nice Iot in Clarendon, on street car line, Lots in Mayne Place, 4 blocks from street car, $1,2 00 to $1,800 Lots in Clifton Place, three blocks from street car line, $1, $1,800. Wo are offering lots in Kilby's addition to res in Brighton, house and barn, Lot on Howard streot, §4,5 Washington Hill, §130 to $200. Don’t fail to see us before buying. If you have property to sell, for quick sale, list with us. Spe- cial attention given to collecting rents. MAYNE BROTHERS, 1519 Farnam Street. Lot facing on 16th and 13th, in Horbach's | House 5 rooms. nice lot. Walnt | soom Dark, o g avente, §900 ou fee Yiitidn & footis. Neleon b raiies, 61 fouse 5 rooms, nice lot, Walnat n..r] m Park, on Virgina avenue, § T\ r QTENIN[ | interviewing Mr. Willard on matters | | Major Frankim and Mrs. Franklin aro ¢ [ { cities in the extent of this evil. But it is | considerable expense, but for this vear | Q()\|} \ TIXTIRE A NEW PARTY CllRleth.\G. for their counties. L el L G U OMAHA ~ PUBLIC ~ SHOOOLS. tifying to know that in this particular | this school has not cost more than some SOME BALLOON ADY ENTURES. A young man who boards in the north | 1 FIsIteE 19 R R R e s there has been n steady gain in the last | of the r v studies of the high school. T Beon Visiting with Mr P g fow ours. T 4050 piipils romaining | Itseams ovident also that a dopartinent — RS T The Fourth Annual Report of Superintend- | in school at the close of last yoar were | of this kind has a tendency to hold boys pEcty 3§ tonal T ; B 0 (e e P P Mmore thin 12 pur cont of the mumber en: | 1 school at a time whon there 13 & strong | 100 Exploit of Two Rival Newspaper Name to the National Union. Aftir tho first exchange of blows he fol: | Mrs. R, I\ R Millor has gone to, Bur Ll rolled during the year. This is a very | inelination to leave and go into busin: Roporters. —_ lowed the maxim ot fighting and running d;{h“u’:;v S IOLWAVISILR WKL ZLLIONGS AN — much better record than has been mado | Our high school and eighth grade ha . | away, to bein fighting trim for the fu- ATBIARY DAREAE lRe Bana INTERESTING INFORMATION, In the high school where this | felt this intluence, and sufiered from it as G Bt ulleld 3y WS b et i BAL S g sl ovil ias oxisted in & sorse form than | much s any chool in the land; | DUCKED IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN. AL L L . anyw )18 has been even | yet of the \y-nino boys who ;‘|N\l\-."lll ndiana with old acquaintances, | o oo ess of the Schools tor gnin than in tho lowor schools. | took manual l".,‘,,,,.\\_v Inst N -1,,.-\..';\3)., - 3 3each, who accompanied him, are at L T - Y, . . Y N ‘our years ago only 56 ver cent of the to- | tive remained in school to the close of the | Con Mahone Flight in the Air and —The New Omaha-Lincoln . Skl il 1) Mrs. J. K. Webster is enjoying a_visit —The High School—Manual oot AR A = y 3 . B ¢ -4 TRRN A o home again and ready for duty. A R JHment remained till the close of | year. This isa remarkable fact in the A gentleman from Saline R year. Last year 83 per cent re- | history of the Omaha schools. Lincoln Soclal News. that notwithstanding the S Journal | 1 2 R T mained. Inthe upper grammar grades On the whole, our oxperiment with a . : : S and the governor lending their support ¢y e & SAr R B Dosition, |y ? 5 there has also been a large gain in this | manual training department in our high [Written for the Oma onday Bee.) to the d tic i wline, that ‘<l(>.ml~‘\| v“ s v3|'m" ILI “M\‘l osi (; L T'o the board of education—Gentlemen: | dircetion. school, so far as it hus gone, must be In the summer of 18 mania for bal- [FROM THE DEE'S LINCOLN BUIEAT.] the entire republican ticket will be | Mb. Durnham "“l‘_ £ ‘-x P 4 [ have the honor herewith to submit my HIGHER RESULTS. considered a success. It has mot inter- | looning struck San Francisco, and con- “The fourth and last state ticket is now | glucted ; :‘.‘.‘k.",‘\‘(fllii“ Y homeward from & Visib | kb annual report on the condition | It thus appears thatin all these particu- | fored with the regular academic work; it | tinued several months, until finally, one in the m-h_l,thu llc!\A‘l \.u-m;:\h.n T mlt_ of | The Hall and Lansing block, one of l'h(' Mrs, 1, B Beecher is in Florlda, whero | and pr ss of the public schools of this rs whiclr ean be shown by statistie: ) has not been excessively _expensive; 'its | of (10 4 ships aupsizel whova! SUiMON a convention held in Lincoln Friday night | fine new structures of thisy TE L et e ey H e 3 S W % schools lecided gain from [ influence on the high school generally X 4 8 B att-monopolists of tho stat, who | in Lincoln, Is completed nearly. cnough | sho will pass the winker manths. | city, which is for the yenr ending with | your toyear, elng In MamBeES MOTe | e O e I o et any | strect, and empting its passengors iuto B fove 1 maintuiaing & strict antl gopnr. | 50 thint tonants can tako: possession in a | o ME 88% IS, - A Hoflinan wers fn | Juno, 1880. jidly’ than the growth of the city | the progrecs of the boys in the. mechanic | the unoccupied spaco below, killed ono e L R s ot Milingely § i R0 O oK of Waverly, s | | From the statistical tables the following roquire, and tenching a bighor do- | arts lins boen satisfactory. It is not too | of them, with a suddenness that was ate party of their own. Owing to the | = Chairman Billingsly is arranging for a Gulesburg tor ‘combining | facts may be observed: aree in many wi I beliove also t much to say that the hopes of its friends | startling, and erippled the other for life, fact thai the_conveation was miserably | vigorous campitign on the part of the re | €06 0 Lty B PRI LT lcatiban tot 1ndbi| ciisiln Yl heen one of suceess in | huve been Tully r T 0] 4 advertised, hardly advertised at all in | publicans in the county, and several | PUFROss \ is in Omahu, the ri 0ol population of 11,831, | the higher and more important spheres SO M : tact, and further, that it had suffered two | Meetings have already been arranged for ads in that oit Vg, f the ¥ + | of school work—in progress in stady and [ The change in the oatfon or- y y o huge Dballoon would SRHtHYS hements, the attendance | 7-0ne at Bennett lnst night, and the next ie Reems, the talented Chicago merease in 188 835, development of character. If we could | dered | ar, whereby the number of | leave Woodward’s gardens and go fumb- | | BBV rerald, Tuesday evening. l‘ s who ovens a parlor school 1n | i b, 1, It thus app : | measure the: sults as we can thoso al- | glasses reduced from three in a among the clouds, to tho was meagre, although those presen Dr. A7 S. V. Mansfelde, of Ashland 4 fim.m«n.-im& L ! school population is not increasing as | ready mentioned, we should doubtless be | grade to two, was accomplished without 4 bt and admiration of vast not lack in energy and enthu: e [ was among the parties transaeting bu AETVAR I OhIe o | rapidly asit did a year or two ago. able to record ns great guns as in the | difliculty, and the sehools are now going SrOWda e hiih Ao R SE RE N DL work before them. It wasn v - | ness in Lincoln yesterday. mmoncement of work. 2. Enrollment. “The whole number en- { numbers enroiled.” ‘The thoroughness of J forward with “the new classification. | (7 nee ATt BoRTHR S SHI 3 night when the following tick sl aptain Winterstein, deputy secretary MiEstMinnieEENURY RA04 ComE rolled in the . sehool for this v the instroction in the high school is | The wisdom of the board in ving this | Ways pleased at sceing other people in wvhrm-ll e ]”_M:I‘_ For gov- | ¢ s home from a visit at his home nfihhfl\]‘ ATiAts A 863, an increasp over the pre o evidenced by the fact that graduates now is apparent fiom the fuct that the aet of dancing on nothin ither as TR L LB O e o PTa bghs| LD X HlinoTolconnty gy tainment at tho ] t ) Jarger procentage of the | enter the leading colleges and technical | with . largor number of pupils, the | wronants or the leading man ata hang- ernor, J. ”nl{\l\ 'I(“ ] TEC; Ul \‘ < On Frid SOCIETY ""r “»‘_- week will | evening to one of the andi total unru)lmmltllm’ll\ we had a year ‘ylumh of the cast “‘ (‘Imu( |f“y\ addi- | 5 hn|01< ar nlml' A',llud]\u‘l\'ll‘ wnlh fewer | inghee, ant governor, M. K. Lewis, of Adams; n Friday evening of this week wi v L AL 3 Attondance, The avers i ~ | tions tion, and from tho begin- | teachers, yet with no loss of eflicienc e e e for ‘sceretary of state, E.J. O'Neill, of | occur the s6 cond meting of the .,n,f,fll) bl i : 1o the last ydar was 4,700, iy k. No high scliool | and higliér classes are maintained insov- m»l\l"pm:!;l:";‘»":L|“m.‘v.‘::l‘:xI.‘;:;v“n::fl'.l.‘: >, TR f . auqua Literary and Seientific a &ret EAoY of 447 over the previous vear. | in the c s to accomplish y eral of the schools than vossible SRR LRpRDGdG il Panne (propibition nomineo); fof weets” | the rooms of Supermtendent Jor ) “Got Thore, BILY iis fnerenso iy a ditdle. moro _than th | moro. The work in p I Tanguago | jast year. The Bighth s Now in | ambitious reporter, with suflici urer, W. 11 O S ore 10 state house. The largely increas - | Johannes Factotum, in St. Louis (ilobe- | attendance at; the Leayenworth —or [ Or composition in all nd partie- | four’ buildings:—the Central, Farnam, | to attempt such an approach of the Great ditor, A. Steadwell, of Buflalo; for com- | bership, as evineed at the_opening meet- | Democrat: An - [linois paper which has | Pucific schools, It will be obseryed | ularly the high schoot has s Iy | Izard an Pacific, instead of the Central | White Throno, could mot bo better missioner, L. B. Pulmer, of Adams: for | ing, gives promise that the Lincoln Chau- | been discussing the origin of late of this | that during the t oy that | meritorious.” “The xzenerous course of the | only, ns was formerly the ease. The | i, tHG SOWd not 9 superintendent, J. D. Chamberlain, of § tanquas will have for the winter meet- | now somewhat roverbial ing, prints | enrollment and attendance have in- | Omaha Rey jcan in offering prizes for | Seventh grade, which four ars ago ly d ; l’: “d. {h\«l«m in 1on to Butle N AT R S s o very large roll of members to re- * an additional varsion of its birth in a late | greased more rapidly than the school | the best high school essays, and giving [ was tawght ~ only in the Cen- | €0 With Professor Somebody in the direc ey R erossional distriet | 5Pond to the call. The programme for issuc, in the shape of the following | yopulation, “Tie seliool population, as | large space”in slumns” every month | tral school, is° mow an all | tion suggested, ina balloon. Generally of threo from cach congrossionnl district | tho sccond meeting, the one the coming | wnique correspondence” from one- of its rmined by the spring. census, in- | to the publication of some of those which | the four building mentioned, and | the distinetion of being talked ahout as was appointed, “""l\ C. Holden chuir- | Friday evening, is as follows : Kans; ad e, L od 5} per cent in the year: tho en- | were deserving of commendation, did Cass and Leavenworth, The | gallant, and brave, and enterprising, or man and J. D. Chamberlain seeretary. |~ Opening 5. oStranger, ©iest want to ehange an | rollment 93 per cent, and thie attendaneo | much to stimulate interest in this wotk. | sixth grado is now taught in all the six | something of that Sort, was the spur, but The committco consists of O. Hull, [ Miscolianeousbusiness, = o |1 l,n‘\u"rlhg d about l)l;' origin of the | 103 per cent. I belicve our high school may justly claim mentioned and in_the Long, | Lhave ventured to think, occasionally, . Burrows, Filley; W. H. | 0 Wl“(}iml‘:‘['l';,‘,"l“‘rl}!(ym\“ and talks in | sayin’, Git there, Bli, (borderin on §vl|~_“ The per cent of attendance based on | high rank for profliciency in the import: | Lake and Hartman school besides. This | that perhaps the thought that they might Vahoos J. W. Edgorton, Stroms- | “Eilatia wnd its ate prince” Mr. | " aper). The Foh truth 1', the averag 0ol membership has been | ant art of composition.” It the present \gement brings the upper ¢ s | not ever g - Heaven m any other Wittonis BMiihden LB LG Bek s Y I'm an old trainer qunl. outhern b 94 1-10 per cent, made in | course can be continued, we shall reach reasonable distance of pupils manner, may have had somewhat to do henesaw; Jawmes Jenkins, “Cr report” on last meeting. sas. 8o long about '76 1 took my Omaha schools'in many years. Compar- | results of which we may well feel proud. | all parts of the It removes an with the maiter, in sporadic cases. for years, requiring One Sund the professor had inadver- Kearney: A. dwell, Prai i} mission with applications for mem- e Eli to the state fair to Lawre ing with other cities we ~find that some 24 TIHE READING. g which has_existed present o better record, but many do [ While the work of reading has im- | young children in many cascs to make | tantly promised two reporters, rep: WSV itiard, Bham. Creek ; borabips Durin’ the homestretehe of the first i ) wa'\n-‘qu\xxm:‘l S asolivistanad Studies on miscellaneous topies,” Mrs, ; the boys heard me urgin the old mare 1o The importance of good at- | proved, there isagencral complaint from | Jong journeys from the “outsk of the | tatives of rival newspapers, to ta a8/0rg Welsh. ¥ Z o the home & , _usin’ the words, ‘Git rstood. teachers above the third grade that the | city’to the High school building in order | up with him, and the capaeity of his bal- Ao .|.~r:.: Iness education of women,” Mrs. An- E‘]fir‘ M, d(‘;‘ ..1'1,f }hw t ||)‘4\lt|4].u‘l‘|‘|\l.xs‘l:‘l§\l: ! i ,,|,L.,qu‘g, I(,] :.m:;‘!.‘llux; u:fi‘z!\rxzhit:m( (::;":vuil“li iqlw?e‘l‘; :u 1i111|‘1 nvclus,} in \'vlll.ilch they could be 1(».‘.{'. was luul,:mliuivlll fi;n;: persons, od. The resoluti 1 railways, on | *hasse ” . Mar- | Mter the close e fair.a iho r roported is whicl® is the | convinced tha s © is aught. Very fow children now are ien the day arri the two were al,l:)'::« il“; l:}umr;‘*l;il:zlll&:l onirallwass on lw_l ossession of one talent,” Mrs. Mar. up)l_xlvl.mi(t) at T opeks, }1‘( |\\'I|.|l|: llest number for sev Four | founded. In the fourth grade in our | quired to go 5o far that they cannot easily | promptly on lu:‘:m, however. Alf Balch dorsing Senator VanWyck ave herewith A{uvry box, Mr. Atkin. every “‘l‘ ) d been ho \‘\["l‘l " 1'" {:‘lr. years ago with a daily attendance of less syhouls last year were o dren seven {.:u home for dinner in the hour anda | for the Chronicle was one of them. Baleh appended Roll call with the names of distinguished )’ unbeknown to me. all,I drove on an two-thirds aslarge, there were | years of age. Nearlva te of them | fulf intermission. Furthermore the in- | was a wise looking fellow who wore e<olved, That the railroad corporations | &eologists. the track witha gelden about nine " s of tardiness, or an | Were only eight years of age. More than | dications are that next year the cighth | gla Indeed he was a wise fellow, Naving beadme o source of oppresslon 10 the | - The La Veta club will give its inaugu- | 0ld, but she could git thar, all the same. | avorage of more than four for ench | half of them 'were ten grade can bo taught in the Leavenworth | except in his passion for bullooning. He m the Long, and the | was cultured and brainy; the son of a pooplo and al agenoy for tho destruction ot | ra) parly on Friday ovening, the 1ath, at | Of course they all hollered, ‘Git thar, | pypilTn daily attendance, Thelust y or younger. And yet the reading matter | school and possibl eo there was an average of a_little more | of this grade is 1 up of seloctions | soventh in'tho Hartman and Luke, so | New England clorgyman and, at my lnst v political liberties, we demand that all | Masonig Temple liall, 8:30 to 12:30 p.'m, | li.’ Tdidn’t saynothin’,but when I e 0 u i E\!1‘“':_"'jl;!";\ll‘l;ll"l_;fl ‘:.';.'31“«1‘.‘:‘““}\'1'1‘ fiylmn_fl""‘g Thayer's Northwestern orchestra will ‘l"”l‘l"“ll"“i Vg'll 1] hgiflhjl‘ml out, “ " | than onc for each pupil. This indicates | from the standard English and American | that the pupils will be even better accom- | information, zed on the stafl’ of the Bhould bo connected with the postofiioe nnder | furnish the music tor the oceasion, which | Jasper 61" dead, B e ottt ag 1 mprovement in the last four | Writers. It 1s true that Longfellow, | modated than they are now. The present | New York Worli. He was lsoa brother sole coutrol of the government; that th promises to be a delightful one in cvery | Fiace thon it has been the s 9 , but comparing our_record | Wordsworth and Scott wrote some simple | convenient arrangement would not have | of the famous lio \eWSPAPEr man, bor trouble would kave no nee to-day | respect. Kirby Hammond is president | Th 1 2tk it of other cities we still take and Lamb, Goldsmith and Cooper | been possible had the old elassification | Balch, who ver picee of detective e on ol susARd. ‘mglm Tegis of the club, C.'F. Wilson, tary . The Kansns c?:xupnu} entof the I_mTTf lower rank n the matter of punctuality | some not very difiicult prose, butnone of | remained unchanged. work capturéd Chastine Cox, a negro upon the above subjects: that if the special | the reception committee for the inguga- | in question muy be a myth, and possibly | than in regularity of attendance. them wrote for children less than ten SUPERVISION, who committed, in New York, the niys- Privileges Which Bave beon granted tocertai | ral are It O'N iil, W. J. Atken, Louis | flesh and blood. B thatasit may, the | “T pelieve the time has come for more | years of age. If our Fourth Reader | I belicve the time has fully come when | terious murder of an elderly lady, whieh classes are withdrawn, and the land of the vs, Frank Wheeler, C. E. Waite, C. ying, “Get there, Eli,” undoubtedly | gtringent rules making better attendance | could be taken two or thr s later it | the board consider the question of mak- | for a long time puzzled the “sleuths,” u-n‘\lyl"l RGOHAs L oI !’f’lih}ilgjyf:mum rothers, while the floor will be in | 0¥ 1875. on the 1_5\11[1:.1(_5. N. Y., | obligatory. As our rules now stand, | Would be admirably ing more ample provision for the sup The othcr aspiring reporter was Ed ehual opportunity at the natural advantages | eharge of the president of the elub, Dr. course, under the fol owing eir | thoy allow greater laxity than any_other In the sixth grade, which uses t sion of the scheols. At present the di- | Clough, who about that time came neag of the count bor would be fres and - J.P. Lawton and Fred C. S i $ AY ofitho animals enterod | eity of which1 nave knowledge, More rigid | Reader, the difliculty exists to a still tion and general oversight of the in- | making himself famous as the author of Sonden N AT v . yunclass was tho wmare Croxio, | rules would effeet only a few negligent | greater extent. The reading matler is | struction is wholly in the hands of the | some remarkably excoliont dialeet tion as will relieve labor from the disabilities ( of a generous surprise party that od | owned in Hlinois by R. J. Edwards, * pupils who will never be prompt unless v composed of selections from the | superintendent. Under the rule - | sketches in the Argonant, with such imposed upon it by the unjust combination | upon ber Thursday evening and s Kentucky born and bred, and was | punctuality is compulsory. As the rules | standard Knglish classics—picces that | sponsibility of the primcipals extends | titles us “A Bad Man From Bodie,” *“I'he and, they have very little influence | hardly one child in a thousind 5 | only to the care and control of the of capital; that pauper and contract emigra- | or in commemorating her birthday, | driven by a darkey named Eli, who | oy ton should be at once prohibited; that con- | ko merry band of surprisers numbered | came with her from v.h<l~ Blue Grass state. | 1y seeuring good attendance. What hs from choice. With such iteraturcit is a | jses, the discipline in the o o 1horas s ‘pap. | some fifty’and musio, dancing and gen- | The mare soldlow in the pool, bt on the | been gumed has beon wholly duo-to the urkable teacher that secures an inter- | and’ halls, the e B A e hadt 5 cral sociability, to which should be added | ot ido there i 0Nk ‘»I;‘f_;["'"},l cflorts of the teachers, whose zeal in this the reading le ) 1 Resolyed, That we are in fayor of the ab- | elegant refreshments, caused the evening ::IA'{‘Tfl"}'II;E" by Bdwards and b i | direction has boen deserving of great | bo expeeted, the exceution of th principal has the slightest responsibility | Finally the wronant, being unable to de- solute prohibition of the sale or manufacture | to puss too quickly y. Mrs. Boban- | €rs. 018, IAILINACE 8PS ‘fl' ‘l e in the upper grade is unsati for the kind of iustruction given by any | eide “between the two, smd that he as a beverage within this state of all spixit- | non wus the reeipie argo aumbor | Mire sevoral tites on privato tracks and ipline.—It is with o great deal | reading is wanting in fluency, natural- | of the teachers in her building, wouldn't go, whercupon Clough deolared vous or intoxieating liquors, | of handsome and costly presents given | Know very well that ber performance s ion that I cull attention to | ness and foree, and it will be diflicult 0 | “qpg present system was insugurated | his eminent ability to run the machine Resolved, "That ‘we' believe the elective | by her friends. that day would be apt to astonish the act that while the discipline of the | make it better while the present course | goyoral yours ago, when the number of | himself, and Baleh represented tha franchise should no longer be held from [ ™y and Mrs. Bullock, at their home, [ Buflulo vs. The mare o schools have been excellent during the | remains unmodifi 8 wi e thi " he il 01 L0 ) i ok Al ? 0 e rs was only a third of what they | was a balloonist from “awny back.” I “‘]’E:E.:II)II\'ll-:l.“!l"‘l’.‘”“é‘rurlilfi'q the assumption of | 1512 R stract, entertainod the St. Paul's | ered her ‘mile ‘in 220 wit Jeur, corporal punishment has coused, to Lam not objecting to the readers in | (OITE W BUY G, TS O SUECEEY | (MK Clough did know a httio somothi s A 3 e e, | behind the h, and he SORDOFAL.DID ! h 5 15, but to thelr ueo.in tho grados 1 h h A _ molvod, hals | S0 aasump s | M. E. church’ choir on Wednesday eve- | P da e o 'factor in seeuring this result. This | the sehools, but to their use in the gra may have been, quite suflicie about handling an affair of the kind, omsAnilthe Enactimont of Jawe In tiis stato | ning. tho occasion being both o musionl | Yangod to eive iho ‘eofored man the | method o control hs practieally been | Which now have them. In the Jourth | H¥ SRS DRI, BNEIOnY, 1O L8 | BTN Wk s gnorant of the thing, praes reducing freightsand fares to an equality | and socisl one tyat was in every way en- “""}; j8 0L \ H “’l 0] |";" .. | abolished. As might be e: cd, the | and fifth grades we should have easier | yive forty teachers all the attention they | tically, as a pizis of philology, ~Nevers with those charged by any read east of the | joyable. These church choir “sociables | M :’d“"lv KOGOF(,: - $110 *_("ti* !““ ¢ | most harmonious relations ¢ existed | books and supplimentary reading in | Hooq "o one can adequatoly supervise | theless, the two entered the ear and Missouri river, and we furthor demand the | scem to be growing in popular favor: ved tholr instructions at tho Judges | between the parents and teachers, as a | abundance. The Sixth grade might uso | ony Rundred and forty. 1 kiow of no | professor lent a hand to help them off. fmmediate repeal of that fraudulent act | “(n the coming Wednes vening the | stand, ll""l were about to wheel for the | consequence of the better method of gov- | our Fourth Reader with advantage. ety that provides for so little supervision | The guy-ropes were loosened, and ti known as the ratlroad commlssion bill, first monthly reception will be held by | start when the shout, “Get there, EIi," | oryment, It is not a raro thing for | With our presentation of free text books | gitd za partof the city had a lively skirmish it A ir | with a couple of foot ay evens Anti-Monopolists Meot and Ohango Their | Hih & touple « vidently bent on robbery. Mars| Beach, who has been at St. Meoting of the Republican Committee | Louis the past week, and Deputy Sherit? Training—Other Matters. Through an Apple Tree. prem- | Yaller Dog of Calaveras,’ et yards On the grounds the professor declared assignment of that he could take but one of the reports pupils and the making of r rts. ers, and each stoutly insisted on going. esolyed, Tl ? ? 0 5 rl 2w as 18 allowed the schools of Omaha. monster—I think *“monster'’ is “the i Thal b ety Chorse the | the Lincoln ¥. M, C. A. at their rooms on | {rom tho stentorian lungs of Edwards | Yironts to make complaint o the super. | changes here suggested would involye st oL Quinbo. 18 = : ; ; stod sities the prino —rose majostically, ane Bancatly nppeal to our tosislatiire 10 1é-cict | Tenth streot. ' A musical aud literary en- | Was heard above the cheers of the aidmir: | intendont of the improper treatment of | no additionnl cost. This is a mattor that moptolbsatnaprnoinalaigiye haltior ali | =ioko, MBUSEOM Ty and "f::fd“,’“‘: ooy s B 1o the Lited States yenate. ; tertmnment will be given and refresh- | 0rs of the favorites in the race. “Eli got | {heir children, and 1believe thav the gen- | should receive attention at once. Our | Giant" suberintendonts ase employ vertical line. Having nttained o sufficient THE REPUBLICAN STATE COMMITTEE | ments will also be served. there, as the vesult showed, tho gallant | gral good will'of the public toward the | reading in the upper grades would be in | Ty sew lurgo citios both assistant super. | heighth to cateh the air-currents she adjourned at noon yesterday after an | Mrs. D. G. King 15 visiting in Kansas, | little mare making tho milo and a record | goliools has been strengthened by the | @ better condition to-day it the evil here | i ts and supervising |rri||cl[‘-|i~ drifted seaward and the amatour mronants almost continuous session sinoe the day | Miss Kate Louis is visiting at Madison, | In 2194, ' She was sold in less than an | absinence from corporal punish- | pointed out, and concerning which there | uloi Somothing is done. o ‘meet this | soon found themsolves hanging out. over before. Itis brobuble that this is the | Wis. urafior tho raco to & New Yorkman [ ment, I have no. donbt that | 18 an entire unanimity of opmion on the | WAt something is dono fo moot 't is | the Pacific Ocean. A tug wns sent to sea only general meeting of the committee Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Foster are among | [0 i Arol return to the use of the rod | partof the teachers, had been removed | corrqin to suffer. This is n matter that | to wateh for them and in the course of 8 that will be held before the election, the | the list of exposition visitors at St. Louis. a0 8 fonoys would produce injurious_results both to | before. should receive the attention of the board | few hours the balloon bogan to descend remaining work to be left in the hands of Mr eck and Mr: P, Platt were | it 108 B b M the discipline and'the relations between MANUAL TRAINING. at an early day. . near the Faralone islands. The tug kept the executive committee, The session | Thursday passengers for Chicago and was repeated at Bufl: by the | the schools and the publie. Such cs cting frater o ses of The introduction of mannal training CONCLUSION. pretty well under the balloon and wh throughout was an open ope, and the | the east. sporting fraterni nd beeame a”com- suspension have been necessary, in a few | into the high school and ecighth grade I cannot elose this report without ex- | the latter vessel had come so near the questions were discussed in- every ph Joseph O'Pelt and wife, thelwell known | mon phrase, all over the country, in & few | of which—perhaps half a dozen-—unman- | has been one of the most interosting fea- S i ) water t 1o Aol 4 5 l'em!uu: to a vigorous m\ml'niun.l The | host and hostess of the O'Pélt hotel, are | months. 2 ageable pupils have been kept out of | tures of the work of the year At '"1’“};{“!7 mi‘n’t‘-’;'}‘l)ii ..L‘-f.'"'.l,fli l:;:m":,lt n('f,‘.l. lml('h\-,xllmtll”“u?«:rl.’“\\'l'l"! l\I\'Lc “::n :iu:g.nl congressional committees wore left vnfl'u_\iuxu\' it at St. Loui ; A Divorced farricd. school for a fow 'woeks, Tho effect of | to be accomplished by this kind of train. | tanohers. Toois enanice to Hn ol | imer. with anl ove to - md‘,n‘.l largely to conduct the congressional 17, and Mrs. Geo. V., Hall weve visit- | Philadelphin Timos: Fourteen years | this method of éorrection has proyed | ing has been much discussed, but thero | of the. ohildren and (e abillty siien | his ohances for life. dropped out of the campalgn, and, in fact, the absoneo of | ing friends and rolatives in Nebraska | ago the marriago bells rang in a Boston | muoh more salutary and in all respocts | s been great uncertainty w3 1o the best | they” bavo brought to. their work are | busket, Laleh was a howvy weight, an Laird from the meeting was an evidenc City the past week. church for handsome John Winter and | more s ctory |fi'uu the resort to the | means of securing the desired results. | apoy, I praise. Respectfully submitted, | the balloon being so suddenly raTley'oq that he desired to be left to himself, Mrs. D, Phil ['!s visited the past week | pretty Alice Lee, and a handsome u- | rod. Technical schools in large numbers have lh ML Jaies, | | $0 much ballust, shot up inte thg although the gentlemen on the com- | at Fairmont with friends in that place. ple, so comment said, never vowed to be 6. The High school.—The prosperity of | been established and conducted with ex- Omuha, Oct. 1, 1880, " . 1 hndred faet wiih ol -0 fr fey: mittee were solicitous tor a good deal of [ Mr, and Mrs. N. C. Brock were also | faithful to each othe; the High seliool had ‘continued. The en- s, but the pupils in these iy 3 iy e “l‘"("l“ most the veloe: campaign work in that district, and [ among the number of Lincoln visit- | Eour years later, after two years of | rollment for the year reaches 250, The | schools differ widely from those in the The 1 r"——m v A ‘;‘!9“ "‘-,I but Clough mBHngS seemed to recognize the fact that the | ors at the St. Louis fair the past week. | noyer-ending dissension and strife, they | daily attendange ‘was 218, and a much | city high schools. The best authoritics sAue of the C5nyention, or's O eRouKR S 84 mluln- her another fight would be no walkaway. Asuresult [ Major and Mrs. D. H. Wheeler of | separated by mutual consent, and, “ac- | larger proportign of the pupils remained | aré not agreed as to the desirability of | Arapahoe Mirvor dhacent: Masawiiih; Byl had hee of the committee meeting, a vigorous | Omaha have been in Lincoln the past ten | cording to agreement, the wife sued for | till the close of the year than ever before, | making u1ezatuding a part of high e republicans of Nebraska—that is, | P ed up aut ll{,"lltllo while the tug ha three-weeks' campaign has boen n- | days called by the illness of Frank L. | divores on tlie ground of desertion, and | The enrollment i 1 torm has | sohool“oducation, And. Mith. this poiat | the politicians who generally attend con: | wor Baand the batloon sato aboard, aud augurated that will keop mauy of the | Whooler thelr son, and a university 120 recoived tho court’s dooroe, | renched &40, sl Gy six por cont of the | conceded, it Is not olear what the sharac: | ventions—put themsolves on record at | © On th falbmon s baen i Gite zinmudxm-s in the field constantly until | student, y were not at w!l 3 D - L om record af n the following Sunday Con Mahonay, wnlike the | total enrollment. Very few cities of the | ter of the training should be. rantl i 4 i e o 7ail who have = i ! : s 3 ] - | the state conve st wee vor | an Irish re s W oction ime. My, and Mrs, H, P, Vail who haye 1685 couples whoso folifos made lifo | country send a karger percentago of the | Our yoar's oxperience 16 valunble con- | e siate couvention last weck us in favor opatier Who VAR workiigs THE NEW TRAIN. veen onjoying an extended visit b easis | o ry to themselves, while swelling | enrollment to ghe,digh school. Until | tribution to the discussion of this subject | °F OUF fraudulent railroad commission, ;.';fiul ‘-h:»'fi:'tdun'fiffi thom o0 0 D Commencing with to-day the long | ern points arc at home in Lincolu again. | the fortunes of divorce lawyers and wit- | within a fow years’our High school re- | now going on, but under the eireum- | Which, it will be remembered, was ereat- | JiHET SHIGC AP W e brofessor i the orophesied Missouri Pacifio Lincoln- [ ~ Mrs. L. Donaldson, who has been visit- | nesses. ceived nnlls' about two por cent of the | stances all undertakings of this kind | ed by a republican legislature two years | licutenant in the Peruvian nayy ek l)m:um train will be started over the | ing at Evansville, Ind., returned home to But mark the sequel, Less than a year | total enrollment, must be looked upon as experimental. | ago against the expressed wishes of a | was fond of diluting upon the fact, the rond between the two cities in charge of | Lincoln, Tuesday. 4 ago they met each other again, after both Atthe close of the year tho following nce the 1st of October, 1855, seventy- | largo majority of the voters of the state. | connection, herewith, will appear futthe Conductor Nicklewait, who brought up | “Mrs. Belle Bigelow has been at Fair- | had hiad time to discover their'folly, und | porsons were graduated from the Hizh | nine boys, about evenly div Letween o sit down on Van | on $ ' o a string of handsowe coaches from Atch- | field the past weck, attending the con- | when each bogan to realize thatv tho ! school : the high ‘school and the eighth grade, 86 self-same pol- | Upon the ocension of Con's air voyage ison yesterday for the make up of the | vention of the Christian ehurch at that | other was not at all to blame, Lhe was Alice M. Avery, Blanche H. Benton, ave had the benefit of this instruction. | iticians and corpor wve only | the balloon coneluded to go out imul the train. The time card for the run is not | place, 5 nothing !luln)r«"lly emotional in their | 1da M. Bruce, Minnie A. Collett, M A. | The course has been optioual, those | added to his popularity with the people, | county It bung about over Sonoma yet out, but the new train will leave [ Mr. and Mrs, T. H. Leavitt, Mrs. Surah | meoting, which olosed but to bo followed | Copeland, Myra C. Hannon, il | taking it doing the same academio work | as has #ince beon proven. Van Wyek | country for s wiile, ahd at Jas dessonts Lincoln ut 7:30 a. m-‘ reaching Omaba | Campbell and Mrs. J. P. Hebbard, were by another and still another. Before the | Hall, Clara ¥ Hutmaker, Charles 8. | as the rest of the sehool. Arranged in | laid out by the republican sts ing, toward night-fall, it thrashod slon nt 11:15; returning, leaving Omaha at | in Des Moines the past week attending | ex-husband knew what he was about he | MeConnell, Juiia A. Newcomb, Arthur | clusses of twenty each, they have spent | tion? Ob, no. It was only the politi tho earth awlile and finally dragged Uofi 680 p. m, and reaching Lincoln at | the mission convention, was dead in love, 8o the chroniolors say, | Rose, Nellie. K. Rosewator, Edward . | one and ono-nalf, hours duily in the ehow | strikers who generally winipulate such | and the professor through in apple-tre, 10 p. Mrs. Mandovijlo azid Miss Shaffenburg, | with the woman ‘from whom he had 50 | Streitz, Jennio' M. Wallace, Louis W. | under the cure of a competont wstructor, | gatherings, showing their true colors re: | and in these movements broke one o CAPITAL CITY NOTES. two Denver ludies, were visiting in Lin- | giadly separated nine years before, and | Weymuller, Elizaboth H. Witian, Emma | learning light earpentry and how to use | garding the control of corporation Con's ar) ) v ) 9 Governor - Thayer, who attended the | coln the past week. what was equally strange the woman was | J. Wood, Anaie.d. Young, ] w0 Lake cro of Lotk *Tho toaouor bt | the naaplo. thalk orentars. Hhe aciian o1 | & fou Arms. o was rimble ou Wo sraers state committes meoting, started homes | Miss Rotta McClintoek, of Omaha, was | quite as much n love with hun. Ihey | * 7. Withdrawals from Sehool.—I have a state or any other convention does not | o sling, and in sheaking of his adventare ward yesterday, stopiug last pizht at | viating in the capital city 8 number of | met again, talked it over, and one day a | on former ocoasions ealled attention o | boys has been lively and. well sustained. | always reposent the sentiments of (e | heing ¢ g ALV Suatton, where the wirn was for- dn‘, the past week. ¥ minister was called in to anuul the de- | the tendency of pupils to withdraw from | The aggregate amount of time spent in | voters, and we dare say the minority re- ay talk about b 0 man mally opened for that & The gen- s, H. B, V\' re has gone to Villisca, | cree of divorce. school before the close of the year. This | the shop amounts to less than a month of | port on which Van was out-voted has | doubts my brav'ry. 1 wasa leftenant in eral commences Tuesday in the third dis- | Ia., for a week's visit with old friends at A little daughter, born shortly after | has been a noticeable charuoceristie of | nine hours a day, and yet the vrogress of | served the purpose of y utting his cuemies | the P'ruvian navy. But it takes more lrlc.t under the state appointment. her former home in that place. the separation, was among the few wit- | the Omaba schools, and it has indicated | the boys has been remarkable. Fow up- | on record as tools of the very corpora- | brav'ry than I have sbout we to go County Treasurer Campbell, of Cass, Fred Harrison, one of the popular | nesses who saw the quiet ceremony and | an indifference on the part of t arents | prentices after a full year in the shop | tions they profess to want controlled by | in another balloon. Still and all, hi uol: was at the state house yesterday ou a | young men of Lincoln, will shortly re- | among the very few people who lived to | which is very discournging. This must | e more practical skill law. Explanations are uscless. The | so much going up in & builoon, d'yi business visit to the state treasurer, 3qu move to Broken Bow to enter business in | witness the marriage of their parents at | be expected to some extent, but there is evideént that manual training | record is made, and Van Wyck scored a | know? as 'tis coming down in n.m'nm'z » umber of other county treasurers were | that place. any timo or place. noreason why. Omaha should lead other | schools cannot be conducted without | victoryin the tabling of his report. " WiLL Visscues, Drasant

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