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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY JANUARY 9, 1887.~TWEI HER MIND WAS DISEASED, | withatocstv oman,moan by o | e, M wosi ottt tome | WHAT THEY SAW AND HEARD, | e ot thewerd, 1 e e+ JUB, IERESY, HASIE AND HATS | Stonst Oners comny ant the e intetest in president and ahead of me? Does she | of the secret which her son mnst have ful and kindly manner. The president verformances of a high order, have suppose that he wants her by the side of | Jong uhp{'(‘i(-('l though hke the .\];n_rl is exceedingly frank and outsvo .,u;xlh given rise to the discussion of many jo- How Mre. Lincoln Canced Husband | him?" She was in a frenzy of excitement, | boy, he cloaked s pain—-was to him a | M, de Lesseps Talks of the Vieit of the | handsome features and fine figure, e | - i portant points, foremost among which is i = Her Koy and lariguage and action both beeame | sort of terrible satisfaction. 1t vindi P . . st be & robust and powerful man. He | 1he News-Tiermometer of Boston During | fortant points, faremos Amgna which ¥, Untold W it e i Bartholdi Del 1 ntold Worriment, more extravagant overy moment. Mrs, | cated his conduet; 1t told for him what L elegation, expresses himself with great fluency, These January Dags. and not alone the Boston clergy, has - Grant again end: red to pacify h he had concealed;it proved |'I'n|| .] \\‘u'rlll\' - never more than he intends, nn,AI i - been very active in the discussion of this but then Mrs. Lincoln got angry wi son of that great father who also bore | NOTABLE MEN A INE CITIES. | speeches were charmingly delivered an question, and in spite of the very com- WILD WAYS OF WIFE AND WIDOW | 3c. ‘Grant; sind all that Porter and 1 | his fate so® hetololly. The revelation o 7 * | most friendly in sentiment. He shakes | BIG BRAINS AT A BEAN BANQUET | (et he S T S O ictars. never e conld do was to sec that nothing more | not only showed these tw o {u nds very heartily. T of course saw Mr p— agree,” this seems to be one thing on Jdealous of Mre, General Ord—The | than words ocenrred. We feared she NOBLE SUFFERERS, Receptions in New York—'Delight- | I3 td when we visited the white house, " " y y " which they are wnanimous. There is a Aok might juimp out of the veliele and shout | but redeemed the unfortanate woman her- | - (EPRE (R TeRt WOTke RS | S S i at several. bunquets; 1 | y Pilots Who Wish to siteer | milCRHCE A0 WO sston oloray to the cavaleade, Once she said to Mrs. | self from the odium for which she was . - - found him a most afiable diplomate Clear of the Theatre—The Nattonal | fhat the ballet and s results are im- Ambulance—All Around In- Grant in nher transports: 'L suppose | not responsible, The world had_known auet—Robust and Powertul “I consider that Washington is perhaps Opern Trowne<'Mats OR" moral. A few of Viem Ave non-com: sults—Selling Shirts, you think vou'll get to the white house | that she scemed to de id malign her Grover—Canal aspects, the the Show. mittal, although it is pretty well known yourself, don’t you:’ Mrs, Grant was | son, that she had appeared to do things FINEST CITY IN THE UNITED STATES et where their sympathies lic. Rev, Ede Green-cyed Monster in an Arviny very ealm and dignified, and merely re- [ unworthy of the wife or widow of ihe . X That it is the neatest and cleanest there —— ward Bverett Hale says he wonld rathee w Yonk, Jan, 7.—[Correspondence | plicd that she was quite d with her | great martyr of our history; had even Panis, Dee. 24—[Correspondence of the | can ho no doubt. 1 was not surprised, 5 % rescrve the question’ for his pulpit and of the Bek.|—The account of Lincoln's | present position; it was ! 1 med to blot the nation's fame; but the | By We were exeeedingly well re- | therefore, to learn that our enarge Jan. 6.--[Correspondence of | ahoose ns own time for its discussion. aking in his history by Nicolay | $he had ever expeetaad tin, Then | pitiful story of Miramar no reflec- | geived at New York," said M. de Lesseps | d'affaires,Count Maurice Sala,is delighted | the Ber.]-—Our holiday scason has been | Rev, R Seymounr, of the Ruggles HRY, . woor almost ominogs | in exclaimed: yon had | tion on Maximilian’s empress, and the |y o000, spond both when we | With his post. Heisa young man who | o wonderful combination of cvents. We | strect chureh, has even' gone so far 18 to Yy i Al ke it if you ¢ T'is very | shadow of msanity thrown across the ' A 4 received his diplomatie training under my | pave hg Al number of suicides | #ay that not only the ballet but the read by the lLght of later se.”! Then she r 1to Mrs. Ord, ligence of Mrs. Lincoln, relieves her | landed and when we embarked. 1o | gvo ™ o lolds in high esteem the society | | it &t 16 Wifte stige, is the grestest ewl next to infem knowledge. “The anxietics and forbod Mrs. Grant defended her friend at the | from reproach or blame. 'Instead of a | perienced, personally, much friendly at- | of Washington. The statues in the public | #11 murders, the double suicide of the | HtE 1% {AEIECOSERE TERE LG TN ngs and absolute agony of the future | © FOUSING er vehomencer | mocking figure, disgracing her nume and | tontion. At the grand dinner offered us | squares — strike me—many of them, at | 1V young girls in the enploy of Jor that all plays are immotal, or thit all ace president on the eve marringe—the when |‘hv re ‘1‘|‘f a lm‘u‘.‘\g;m.“‘ :‘ ::.T ':\‘ml Kl‘_m{l‘l'\ll i ~|:4‘" ‘|.mm|‘~y.‘- by the ehamber of commerce, one of our et -~'| worthy (vlv]\'(lw of art 4 H:nrl»ll .\—(‘u, being one of the most hor (‘.‘..‘ nd actresses i‘.wl‘\'v d (m “ys X X nephew of the seeretary « romes an - obje of commseration, §ta. 1 e id , . ashington monument possesses one | ble rodios sted in Bostor ¢ | Mr. Seymour, * soth, for ins e most incredulons might say, presaged D A R g M D S O Bl G O ) in Laking ty and, oxclaimed: ‘1 | ASHRION, INCRUEIOE posesses SU3 | blo tragedies or b A RO DR LR e L the destiny that impended. For no one supand trying o say something | own words or the result of her own | &rectyou M. de Lesseps, in the name of | (h01idk in the world. T was goin States hotel has been the scene of a digni- | e performances he gives are such s knows the character of Abraham Lincoln remarked: “The y lent’s | decds, or perhaps vainly stuggling to re- | seventy-five millions of dollars.” This was | that it towers above fied gathering of learnca theologi will not only please, but - improve every his god-like patience, his ineflable sweet- | horse is very lant, Mrs. Lincoln, he | strain them both, and regretting in her | a eharacteristically American remark, | gives you that imp! rising as it | whoere the trial of the Andoy srofossors | one. But [ regard Mr. Boofli as an ox- Besw, his transcondent charity amid all | telsts gn riging by’ the side of Mes. | sanor fnte vl tho vory nels she, was 46| and made an_impression o my mind. b ol 2o gt e has taken place., “Thien we have had ban. [ eobtion, and Llook on the stage, as ¢ vy s of conrse addec !l to the | other time: ole to control, And Lin- | oo oot o 3t ¢ s “1 found that public ovinion in r quets an day festivals w end, | Whole, and so looking, I canunot but re phe tremendous worries of war and revo- | fluue, “What o yon mean by that, | coln--who. that. reveres and loves iis | The city’s hospitality knew no bounds, | "L [GUEH, (hat Publieopinien i regure AL tht SYOrIH 1 akands miorout Bt | Fard Jta i isonen fs Uk lution and public affuirs, who is ignor- | <ivy™ sho eried. — Seward discovered that [ memory will not respeet his character | We had delightiul rooms at. the Hoffiman | 1ol in Aerica Since 1 was the - | moment od i its gidy whiel, nor | Suehis the opinion of one of our elor- ant of what he endured of private woe; [ he had made a huge mistake, and his | more profoundly, and feel that he hasan- | house, and forty covers were always laid | The Monroe doetrine 18 no more moote has it deigned to give a :T».“.n ; thought is sefe to say that all the and noone rightly judges the unfortunate | horse at once doy o pecubarity | other and a tenderer claim upon our | for us. But we were invited out so often, | During my first visit 1 listened very at- | tg the tragic and solemn scenes which | others agre him i regard o the partner of his elevation and unwitting | that compelled him to ride behind, to get sympathy and honor, since we kiow that | ghat we ate at home only two or three | tentively to all that was said on_this sub- | Jave transpived so 1 hand. £ | ballet. Tf this fecling 15 as strong in eausc ot many of his miseries, who for: | 0t of the way of the storm 3 even this cap did not s from W 4 gies. 1 knew by former experience | §°¢t and finally came to the conclusion | 1P “kiske, D, Dy, has writton—a | Other cities as it seems o be i n, gets that she had “eaten on the insane Finally the party arrived at its desting- | Amid the storms of party hate and rebel Whilt to exBiost, but soims, of Ty Tellow that Amerieans did not understand the | payiphiet. published by Cupples 0 he ballet will, at least, heve havd Yoot that takes the reason prisoner.” tion and_ Mre. Ord came up to the ambu- | lons strife, amid agonies--not irreve Hs B2 del) t A Monrou doctrine in its bearing on my | & Co., in which he gives o oritical review to keep above board. 1 will The country knows, but has preforred | lance. Then Mre, Lincoln positively in- [ ently be it said, like those of the cross travelers we tomshed at this gener: [ Panama undertaking, nor could [ tind | of the historic Andover creed telling | ©Ven go farther than this and venture the t forget, the strangeness of Mrs, Lin- | sulted her, called her viie numes in the | tor he suflered for us- the hyssop of do. | ous treatment. nrle person who was able to tell me | what it is snd what it ds - not b that the days of the ballet, as coln’s conduct at interyals after her hus. [ presence of a crowd of officers, and [ mestic misery was pressed to'his lips, and 1 was particularly. pieased to notice, rly what its relations were to the pro- | [ shall — not de with. the is now given, ave nimbered. The peo- band’s d Many of the most extra- | asked w she meant by following up | he too said: ather, wrive they [ not only at New _\m'k, but elsewhe posed canal. So 1 took pains to explain | jonghty details of this sreed ¢ not degenerating; quite the con ordinary incidents in her career were not | the president. The poor” woman burst | know not what they do that the Freneh who i settled in- the | everywhere my inte: pretation of that | iecause snch things are of littlo interest | trary. They mnst have amusement, and Yo u-d‘ Bitof ta fo others und | into toars and_ inquired whut she hnd DAM BaAbEAT United Statex were quite Amerieanized in | famous deciaration. 1 did not touch wpon |ty tho genc public. Tho trial itself, | 88 time goes on there will be tenderncss to one who had been the | done, but Mrs. 1 In refused w he ap- —— most tllinz\ 1 f“m"f‘ lh‘:n.‘xlnl; had | this matter with the president durinz my | owever, mvolves the possible conden: | 1084 demand for vieus ances gharer of Abraham Lincoln's fortune od, and storn ull <he was tived. 3 TER OF THE CONTINENT. "I;""“y‘ | "'jl‘lfllflx AL bl I\( _lmil;m nt visit, but I did talk with hin about | yation of fiy professors of the Andover | fnd @ greater demand for and the mother of his funily, but enough | Mrs. Grant still 1wied to stand by her s MhI LRI e L ool | b itself and explain to him cet- | theological sominary, and it is thereforo | Juctions of a better eluss to shock and pain the pub end, and everybody was shocked and Geographical Advantages 'm“'”;ml"- TR B h e Lt ol into n | {mindrawings of the work bemg done on | full of intorest, not” only to the elorgy | ade a wonderful i L when finaily the conflict with | horrified. But “all things come to an More Railroads Neede hoticed that the boys were formed into | the isthmus. 1 came — away from the | and Taity of the Congreational churet, | M8 twenty years, aid the time is sur 80h; Dizhly rospected, the | end. and after while we retur 10 o i el e .. | battahion for mihtary drill, just asin the | United States with the mmpression that but to the religions wo avge, | come when the baliet and ey oF thele wihiry nin & it || City Point. MANA, D can. @oto the Hditor | primury schools of Paris, = Neatly all of | the Amiericans ate u favoruble to ouren- | Grave charges of hoterodoxy liave boen | grading tendeney of the 0. on of the ' That mght the president and Mrs, Lin. | of the Bee: There are few persons who | the Freneh emigrants speak English, and | terprise as we are ourselves. They aceept | bronght agauet cortain professorsat An. | 1 may De well t this conuection int of her [ coln entertained General and Mrs. Grant | stop to think of the advantageous geo- [ have evidently castin theiv lot with the | the inevitable. And well + for | dover, and the group which assembled | that the “hat reform™ s deciaedly a etions, if not of her person—disclosed | and the general’s stafl” at dinuer on the | graphieal position O occupies in | United States. I was glad to sec this. It are benetited by the exeayating, as a [ jast week in the United States hotel for | move in the right dirceion. Its resi the fact that steamer, and before us all comparison with its computitors. Take | 15 Often said that my “countrymen go to | gr Lof our muchinery is madein | the trial was indeed a ng one, | are alveady apparent, During the st TIER MIND HAD BEEN DISEASED, MES. LINCOLN BERATED GENEEAL orp | COMPar ! its competitors. ALake §he United States to make a fortune, and | the United States. Grave divines sat listening to every word | engagement of Booth in the ton the- This threw a light on eircumstances | o the president, and urged that he | 8 map and draw straight lne from | then return to France to spend it. 1 L “Many questions were put to me with the closest attention. 'The best 1 atre, about one-tifth of the < i the until then inexplicable. It relieved Mrs, | should be removed. He was unfit for his | Omaha to Jamestown, Dak., then draw a | happy to find thatso many remainin theiv | loeks at Panama. . This was always my | talent of New England was at orehestra stalls and 1 ony - ap- Lancoln herself from the charge of heart- | place, she said, to say nothing of s wite. | similar line from St. Paul, Minn., to | tdopted country and become Americans. | answor: When T made the Snez canal | among whom was (o be secn the § | beared minus theie usual sky-scraping Jessness, of mercenary behavior, of in- | Gene irant sat next and defended his | jamestown and the distance is in favor Another, thing that Cintercsted me | this sume lock problem was brought up | faes of Senator Hoar, to Keep the com- | apparatis, Apressions of almost difference to her husbind's happiness; it | ofli oly, OF course General Ord | 06 Ta y in New York, was tihe Brooklyn | and I w. s told that without them my | bative theologians from crror i points | religion on the faces of the approved the action of the son which, in | was not removed o i y 1t was a fine sight to stand there | undertaking would be a failur w aw. It is impossible now to state | shortne rentlemen who sat behind some quarters, had been gravely misin During all this visit similar ssenes the same manner extend the comparison | ¢ the statue lighted up in the harbor, hear this said again in regard to Panamu. | what the result of the trinl will be, but | them we ainly noticed derstood; and above all it showed the | were occuring. Mrs. Lincoln repeatedly | 1o the west iine of Dakota where the day afterits inauguration, while the | Well, when the'eanal in” mangurated, if { public opinion is decidedly in favor of It hias been especially requested by the suftering Abraham Lincoln must have | attacked her hushand in the presence of | Northern Pacitic crossas and the distance | bridge itself was so brightly illuminated. | locks are then found necessiry, 1shail | the nequittal of the acensed professors, | Man ull WO SES. (B endured all through those years in which | oflicers beeause of these two ladies, and [ 18 exactly the sume. Mil, Under sueh circumstances, wemight well | not object to their being made. * But for 1 in the trial the audience gave fro- | Company this senson - that ludies appear he bore the burden of u Struggling na- iffered greater humiliation” and [ Miles nearer to- Omaha on an | Ty At those o oreations, ofte due to | the present | am opposed to the expen- | quent and audible proofs of its sympathy | With neither hats nor bonets tion upon his shoulders—whether h ccount of one not @ near per- | and the comparison west and south of rench daring and the other to American | diture of the $30,000,000 that the con- | for the de s I'RANZ SEPEL, knew or only feared the truth, or whether | friend than when 1 saw the h the points mentioned is much more | daring, must be added to the wonders of | struction of —th locks would entail. | * mly in the sad thought | the state, the man who e tavorable to Omaha. St. Panl is only the world. - Tsaw the bridge at its inecp- | Logic and science convinee me that locks | his saddest forchodings before the 8 of the nation s—sub- | few miles mearer to Chic tion, several years ago, ang was de- | are not neeessavy, But if 1 am mistaken o were fulfilled is sible public morti- | this city so that taken o ¢ + | lighted to gaze upon it in its completed | in this, they ean be constructed after- irst_time that 1 saw Mrs. Lincoln “hrist might have | Omaha s in a position geographicaily to | state. Y " wards, when it s found that naviga be one of the principal politi- | Monthiy for Jz 1t was 1ndde was when I accompanied Mrs. Grant to | done; an expr n of pain and | dispute with St. Paul the 4_|In:x.h1«- Da- _Um- more pleasant ‘rm'nlh'(»lmn of wnnot be carried on without them. In al, o as social and comme , | stress of such famine that the half- the white house, for her fivst visit there | sadness that cut one to the heart,but with | kota and Montana trade. The *( Brooklyn, suggested by the name of the | the meanwhile, I'shall continue to hold | events of the year, and it is attended 1 population of the Canudian Novth- the 0 wife off the rgencral-in-chicf. | supreme calmness and dignity, He | West” is now our undisputed territor, gront bridge, was u_recoption offered us | with Lincoln, that there is no neod of | with much pleasire and profit by leading | waat. willeh hae 61 15t boeh so mttels oo The next that [now recull was m March, led her “mother,” with his old-time | . Now compare Omaha’s location i that city, at which Jadies were present, | erossing w stream until vou come o it.” | business men and - their invited guests. | tore the world, grew to its present pro- 18064, when Mys. Lincoln, with the presi- | plainness: he pleaded with eyes ana | its ne: more ambitious iy all vvalhwlm I.‘)“l .I-nd nmi‘:\ of them - i he affair has got to be of so much | portions. s history carries us back 1o dont, visited City Point.” They went on a | tongue, and endeavored to explain or | Kan v, The latter hasclumed New D T A A R i STk Rallway Accident eeononne mporianee that I am inclined r the beginning of the cightoenth cen- steamcr, escortéd by . naval vessel palfiate the offences of others, till she | Mexico, southern Colc » an- | gentlemen and ladiesatogether, und 1|, 0, g0 5500 o e or of | to forgive one of my somewhat Anglo Arthur Dobbs, whose sceount of which ' Captain -~ Joln Barnes | turned on him like a tigress; and then he | 818 : reitory ¢ s naryo. i Toundithoiunion fugrconblodiiioveryive: | e et e TESEine \ maniacal fricnds when he remarks that adjacent (o Hudson Bay was in command, and remained | walked away, lnding that noble ugly face | culiarly her own lo so by proximity. [ spect. 2, ML wong trom ey 1o day 1 Sihis hanquet, as o feast of political rea- | wis published in 1741, obtained his - for some weeks inthe James river | that we might not eateh the full ex- | Omaha is about prey red to dispu UMET MANY DELIGHTFUL AMERICANS the details m_ appalling dents con- | son, gives us the n st approach to the [ formation almost wholly from 2 half- under the blufl, on which tho head- | pression of 1ts misry. vight to at least one-half of her bo: at New York . ‘There was Bishop Potter, | stantly occuring on railroads, in_ which | lord mayor's banquet that can be found | breed trader ealled La Frances proof hlished. Here they GENERAL SHERMAN terntory and who ofliciated at the inaugnration cere- | th e unfortunate vietin liter: | outside of London.” ‘The that the metis was not unknown acen usually took ~their meals, | was u witness of some of these episodes | divide ti < 4 Dr monies, He and Mrs. Potter came back | yoastod alive, it appears imperative that | oF the Hotei Vendome, rii tury : 1 The explorations of times hoth ascended the hill and them in his memoirs [ 51 it line fron: Kansas City to Garden | on the smme steamer with me somo ofloatunl s should be deyised | Weeks awo, such 1 X Pyt the Ve her and - sons, lasted were entertanec 5 . Captain Barnes, ot the | City, Kan, and = one from Omana cecdingly entertaining and gen- | 1010 ¢ eans showld be devised | e "(to prosident and his charming | from 1 : fter the conquest of THE MESS OF GENERAL GIRANT. J fihess and n sulferer. too, | to the same hoint and you will find them hen there was Mr. Chauney” M. | by whieh such horrible calamitles could | Wifo, was the seene of & brilliant assem: | ¢ » England, the fur-trado consed On the 26th of March « distinguished | Barnes had accompanied Mrs. Ord on | 0 an exact iength. I the same manner v, W whose external appear- ted. | i blage of Boston's leading business men | for s years; but in 1766 the Mon- party from Washington joined ™ them, | oy unfortunate ride and refused after- | 10 Denver,and Omaha | ¢ advant: ane _highly prepossessing. He Ihe ries ained in ra and their cmment guests. The hall was |y, < began to push northwestward, among whom I remember, especially, | ward to say that the lady was to hlame of ninety-one mil So to Puenlo, Col., 3 2 great oratorical powers. | wreeks generally instantaneous and | beautifully doce famous G and from that time their agents, mostly M. Geoflron, the 'Fronch - minteter. 1t MES. LINCOLN NEVER Iy and Omahit has the advantage by forty tht to your heart. He | not so terrible as compared with being | mania band dis swee French-Canadians, mingled frecly with was proposed that an excursion should Aday or two afterward he went 1o miles. Then to 4 N. M 1d | made several specehes on different ocea- [ locked within a mass of shapeless tm: | music. and never was New England hos- | the Indians-—-the conseqiience heing th be made to the front of the army of the | speak o the president on some official | Omaha has jge of twenty | sions, and they were grected with well | bers and there burned alive. The tor | pitality more genuine and intosmal. Be. growth of w half-breed community Potomuc, 1 or twelve mile: ay, | matter whon M. Lincoln and several | M The : ases as the | deserved appinuse. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, zony of such a death are in- des many st of the *“‘Ba There was a considerable population, others were prosent. The president's line is extended farther south, until at | the editor of the Tribune, whom we met cribable, especially when in the sight | state,” such as Governor Robinson, John | known by their chosen designation of ) MRS, GRANT aid something to him unusually of. | 121 Paso. Tex., Kansas City has the ad- often, L also consider a remarkable man. | of relatives who are helpless in vender- | D) Tong, Henry Cabor Lodge and | Bois Broles (for w they sometimes wore of the company. There w fensive that all the coripany couid hear. ;’(unlggvgl Uma 'n‘nlvv twenty miles. | The Hon. Levi P. Morton, I was glad to g assistunce under cireum | Senator Dawes, “there were present: | substitated the mor tons style of tary railrond which took the illustrious | Lincoln was silent, but after’ a_moment | Kansas City has already to divide with | see once more, for we had ‘not forgotten Bre 1 s over which passenger | Senator Ha of Maine, who 3 “the new nation”), when Lord Selkirk uests a great portion of the wuy, and ent up to the young oflicor, and | Omaha the north haif of Kansas, and | b entertainments at | conehes run daily and are comfortably | spoke on st defenees | pegan his scheme of colomzation in 1811, then the men mounted, but' Mrs, | taking him by the arii led him into his | Petore many months we will invade | Paris. T ha - favor ¥ al in- ted by steam. In the eust coaches | and nayy i Congressman Curtin,of | That even then they were not o)l French Grant and Mrs. Lincoln went on in an { own eabin, to show him her best-paying territory lying - west | troduction to Mr. Charles A. Dana, of the | have been successfully lighted by the in- | Pennsylvania,was a most welcome visitors | ix shown by somc of their snrnames ambulance, as it was called sort of |y . he 'said. He made no ren and su\nhv of G m (_n'. Sun, who struck me as being no ordinary indescent electrie light, By the comb i- | Senator Bust f siana, Con e coteh or English. But it is from half open carriage with two seats besides | Barnes told me, upon what had occured’ | BY all the existing lines of raiiway we | man, In all those who are intrusted 10n of both systems, which are praeti- | man- 11 4 cnaior the vears immediately following the es- for the driv 1 was dotailed to cs- | Ho could mot rebuke his wi but po | Are, nearer Chicago than Kansas City. | with responsibility inthe United s | cable und economical, such heartrending | Alabanu, represented the new tablishment of the Red viver coiony that cort them, and of course, sat on the front | showed his regret and and or r line the d e is_ubout | scem to be just the persons for the task. details published in Sunday’'s Bee I'he Iatter gave a scholarly the bulk of the Englishspenking ™ haif seat facing the ladies, with my back to | oflicer with a touch of what s¢ equal. Omaha needs three railro: unfortunately did ‘not see ex-P it | would be unknown. It is the ‘dut s upon the banking systen breeds date their fivst ance. In the horse & the most exquisite breeding im . | to make her |ur!n gn!lu'vl est paying Arthur. Nor did L meet Mr. Bl s | every railroad w provide such safeg 24 s g 1 “Hon: B e | the vi 1811 they m 200, In ““In the course of conv 1 men- | Shortly before these oceurences wgest territory of the United States un- | time. But Iknow him well, s expediency may sugeest, that e R e S T ) P tioned that all the wives of oflicers at the | MIs. STANTON 1IAD VIS 3 or, | disputed, and their products dircetly | very much. I'n ] suro the safuly and comfort of its vas words of wisdom on the ¢ (as those of British and Freneh ori army front had been ordered to the vear | and I chanced o ask he uestions butary to this point. Thus On Vishington ye yeurs ago. Seni sengers, and if this they omit, it is the he far west was not bemnd in | may be distinguishod) were estimated =4 fure sign that netive operations were | about the president’s wife do not ""‘."’,’,’“‘ ',’.’“ ul ",",‘“‘*'1"“ ‘”,;'“‘ & - 4 d to me the vitty | duty of f”"grf’“ toleniakBReh slmes thint : il P, Hep- | 10,000, ides them, ther R in contemplation: I said not a lady had | visit Mrs. Lincoln,"” was the reply, 1 | Cities for receiving and distributing mer- cspeaker whom 1 ha willanake il compulsor koS paid 2 glowing tribute to | lation” of uncertain minb been allowed to remain, exeept Mrs. been mistaken, The | chandise and DErollehing the Hygsiock |t dirlig ) Iminis - He 1L Lowney. Boston, and Congressman Mor- | through the teretories, and « tribe of Griflin, the wife of General V. y r must visig | 8nd other produels of the great west. | may have zrown olderin body. as I have, A SR of Californ, made a | speeeh | half breed hunters which one carly ex- Griflin, who had obtained a sp per s wite of the president; and J renewed | 1t ';";“““", LT f; _""_ uny ‘”] butin mind he is still the brilliant gen- _ Senator Cameron's Home. the Chmese ques 5 ylorer deemed 1o be 6,000 strone. In 1874 mission from the president, At this M my {nquiry, “Undorstand’ mo, siee” sho | 30, the unlon, Gan Omaha cupin 1 who used to presideover the state | Philadelphia Times: The residence of | Sherman sent his. . M AL Dawson, while ongruged in the Lincoln < up in arms, WV {0 you ¥ , " “L do not go to the white “"“.“" ) ““",r’" ¢ of theso ‘:“l"}" sit rtment. S . Senator Cameron on Madison pi I promment men wer o be nbsent | ish North Americun Boundary Com mean by tl 9 gho exclu 3 houso; I do not visit Mrs, Lincoln." nl_(;\l\ll.mlll[llul'lmlll our r I\[!n!mn)vmu “1 did not go on to Niagara Falls with i president’s honse, was the | on scconnt of the de f General Logan | mission, eame upon the camp of the lat- Jou miin Lo &y Uhat She saw the prosi. | was not itimate with at the time, | Hights llulu lvu'h.nu of the fuirest other dele ates, for T had seen that r aylor mansion of the early | but suc y atoned for | ter body, consisting of 200 buflalo skin daut alonc? Do yon know that never | nor indeed eve nd this ren city in the \\nlum} makmg a pull, a 1 wonder on the oc susion of | days of the present century. About by the large « and extreme good | tents and 2,000 horses. Dr. Witson eon- allow the prosident to see any woman | extraordimary that 1 ne long pull and & pull altogether for the former visit. Lran overto Philadel- | year ago, after the sale of the Bofline | will w ey o dominant. | siders the vise in this way of an inde- alonet’’ Sho was absolutely ‘jealous of | Tunderstood it afterward. noops T il facilitiest Let Omaha citi- a, whilo Chauncy M. Depew wasshow. | house “on Scott Circle, West End, the | The Merchant's binquot was a glorious | pendent tribe of half-bracds as “one of igly Abraham Lincoin. Murs, Lincoln contl o conduct to- | 7ens make concerted movement v colleagnes the famous eataract. I | senator purchased it~ from Colonel | success, and it added another new and | the most remarkablezphonomena connec ) . ward Mrs, Grant, who strove 1o placate llions of tie east \'nll‘ build I cly strong attachment for | Brown, the N W York journalist, who | lasting band of union between the nor ted witi the cthnologieal experi- Wita fal i ver | bor, and then Mrs, Lincoln becume more | T irich our city. This 1s the cer City ly father, Count | had purchased it for his” newly-marricd | south, sast and wost. ment which his i progress on th g Very e ontrageous still. She once rebuked Mrs, c| ul]lllu).« s improvements athien de Lesseps, who was a member | daugh T'he colonel paid 000 for hd * * * + J North Ameriean con‘inent for the last D A Ll sted and otr citizens do not ap- | o Philosophical society of the United | the property and gave carl wncheto | The rocent successes of 1he: American | three centurios, A T ; ) to be making any movement o | States, and 4 very learned man, went to | gome New York house decorators und aw that woman alo el Yy share n the general prosperil ¥ that is delphia at the beginning of this cen- | furnishers, who spent #15,000 i perpe. | ~====== s.on0 of tho best known | experionce at that tromen %) for our fair luna during the | tury to negociate a Commercial treaty | trating one of the greatest masterp T o | vomon i Ittt g ¢ e history. fc H next twelve months, The board of trade, | with the young republic. It was the first | of bof in the line of house decor IR ntoronion InAWakningtony fjtho naton i iletory, for's or the Omaha freight burcau does notscon | treaty of the kind ever made between | ton to he scen i Washington, HOW TO ACQUIRE WEALTH, COUNTESS KSTERIIA? paign. to have as yet met the emergency. In | ¥ p und Amer 1 sequently Colonel Brown ighter objected to ety i — o Carroll, and & person: quuintance of . 9 fae an onlooker th |lm )vu«-h the ap- vays feel at home in Philadelphin. And | the house as too large. Senator Cameron, 1s, Grant, who to molify the ox ) n u'c(i,)ffm[ "f I_u-l\\l; -.u.:‘lblv.'l_wt} how much cleaner this town is thun New took it ofl hi hands at 67,000 | NO BLANKS! B1G PRIZES! EVERY YEAR OVER A MILLION DISTRIBUIEY, eited spousc, but in Mrs. Lineoln | Washington pesisec OunhTiimenisn taoitho ofioris of 1Y t braary, and ever since, under 'the MOKE TIIAN ONE DRAWING A MONTI agun bade me ston the driver, and when m Apnon '8, G he other because of nt jenlousics | should be ir atter of pavements | s ision of Mrs, Cameron, the work of ST AT 1 AT ST T A esituted to obey, sho thrust her arm | with him. existing botween them. “Lielieve an in- | and well-swept streets, — But, to tell th ng the sample paper, imitation MANANGR. I Jg ABY: 2 4 me to tl 5 and | Ge and A \oand the seeretary dependent movement of citizens would | truth, I must add that it tined agreat | woods and other metropolitan artist the dr . But Mrs. Grant fin- var 1 i were invited to m-n_'m_uplhh the 1In-.~vn-~-d result providing | deal while we were in New York, 1 cffeets, and the substitution of Only §300 required to secnre on Royal Talian 100 franc 1 se honds ait il the whole | accompany the ot and Mrs, | Uity and harmony can be effected, the sun shines, the busy thor- | tasteful decoration has been going on. | parucipate in 225 drawi drawings o yéar and| rotuin yriginal value , and then General Meado | Lincoln to the N swer - LD, ahfar Manbattan — Island are | Coloni ors have been adopted within | il the year 1944 2,007000 1,000,000, 300,000 &, Lancs will e > up to pay his vespeets to the wife of | had yet been sent A anton s B uter. 5 A and without in of the dingy g sides the Certainty of receivin K 100 francs in ol you may win 4 tine the president.” I had intended to offer | ealied on Mrs. Grant to inquire if sie The Coming Millionaire, ‘While delphia T visited the | Rieh embroideries and mirrors “of Tene | (78T possession of a We oficr (hese bonds tor $2.00, mont [ Mrw. Lincoln my arm, and endeavor to | meantto bo of the party. *For,” said | 1 Mr. W, E. Connor, Jay Gould’s part- | celeb Girard college, due to tian handiwork, onc and two AR e A B prevent a scene, but Mewde, of eouse, as | Mrs Stanton, “anless y wpt the invi- not within the next twelve months "HE ITY OF A FRENCHMAN, old, and water colors and etching | With only $2.00 08 flr<t huyment yon can secure f Biroponn goveenvnt honds, [ my superior, bad the vight to escort her, | tation, 1 shall re v it with- | one of the richest men in America it will Itis a magnificent institution with its | in favor with Mrs. Cameron, X | 16 times annudly With prizcs aelounting to over 0,004 marks, liglaneo wi ea BT i 1o oharico to warm hiw.. T st | ont yoli in the box w s Liucoln.” | be astonishing. Ttis well known that ho | tweive hundred children. Hard by gro [ the walls, “The upholstery andt furnisi- | nstalnonts’ Suto investment of enpital s th insexivl L them go ol together, and remained in | Mrs Grant o s 1 ut with what | went to England for the purpose of pla machine shops that turn out a locomotive | ings are in keeping, s thoold mans [SNIHMR I WILA DI Pivkes Ik RaLANE SRLLUN TOKIRIINCR Tattor AT ar and trembling for what wight she hiad enduy and decided not to ing the treasury stock of the Phanix y day. owhere else in the world, [ s1on has a ly g d about ux % BIURLIN BANKING COMUANY, 305 Broadway, New York. of the forcign mi 0 | to the play, 1i dregiaing of the terri- | Mining company with English investor, per s, ean such a feat beaccomplished, | whicli it neve palmiest days N. 8.~ 50 bonds e not lottery tiekets, and the sule is legully normiitedl ity a0 1878), important strangers, Lle exper sho wus cseaping, | butarich strike - the mine which oc: | for nowhere else are so many railroads | of its early ar aie oceupants, | General Meade was very adroit, and | She determined to go th night to red before he reached the other side United States,” Six loco- Fwhen thoy returned Mrs. Lincoln New Jersey, where he shanged his entire plan and bids fair k, all ready to start out on ¥ ‘c’xfis}fi llnlig"\lx‘\lll‘?m.xl:‘x:l K'\:ud»"“. t;; ¥ vmup)“.m' ; the hero of a story equal to i'\i’“"” . Think of it!” It is an 1|~lnf:i SAY WHAT YOU WILt" PROPERTY ON SALE BY THE one ot the Arabian Nights, and to place hing fact, and shows what industr WS not the presudent who gave Mps of apology to My hiw in the front rank of the millionaires | progress has been made in ity that Gritin the p t, but the and Mrg, Stanton zlso deelin of the metropolis. f s stranger | Was once known only as & literary, poli- | ELCHETARY OF WAR.' vitation 'li‘l uy b ey N th thus than fiction is proven in Mr. Connor tacle und scientific center, [ Moade was the son of n diplomatis ved their st ivo experience in the Phaenix mine, A well- Mr. George W. Childs, who is a friend ad evidently inherited some of hig nurder of the president, the | known Wall street man who had been | of my family, invited me to & grand ban- [ athor's skill, cceontricities of AU fineoln beeanme | unfortunate in his previous mining entes quet, Inever mw‘myuiu‘: like it, In L At night, whon we were back in eamp, [ more apparent than and people be- | prises was as long ago as 1879 the owner tllm dining-hull was a circular table large (531. nt "ulk d over |h;\ matter with | gan to "v “- " llcll hfir mind had not | of n'n(n- lum(ml of the Pharnix mine. He euuugli 10 seat hln-zy or l‘;fty f(n; lsl.J W xlo o, und suid affuir was so dis- cen aftocted by her tervible misfortune, | worked it spasmodieally from time | were placed on the outside of the board. i i i P O i et 1 Y i marge rossing wnd mostifying that we must | My rd told mo that she sold the | o time, and. finally ot inta 4 | The wholo space in front of the tablewas | CONsidering location and prices, is the hest investiment in the market @ver oither montion it to any one;at | pre i’s shurts with his initials marked | serions litigation over the title of | one mass of flowers, chiefly roses, which deast, L was to be sbsolutely silent, and | on them, before she lett the white hous the property, which resulted in his having | aboi I believe, in the hot-houses of 8 would disclose it only to the geners!, | and learning that the imen was for saje # judge of the United States court who | Mr. Childs’ country home at Wotton, not £ £ Qg . " VR ‘ 8 eal 5 0o §1.300 ut the next day I ! A it n shop on Pennsylvania ue, he | decided the case against him removed from Philadelphia. The walls of the Athorough investigation will convince Lots in Washington Square, city water ts 1 Catalpn 1'lac L0 to 81,500, W, ined behing t and hought it pi oly. % ffice by President Cleveland. The re bedecked with flowers, and | the most skeptical. Property well bought | in front of cevery lot, §1,500 to §2.500, strect, §1,000 to £4,500 'ho same party w. L the morning to | LINGERED AT T | new judge reversed the former decision | there were bouquets of Toses of every | is twice sold, and persons who have pur- Timebauah' ) s on Northh 20th street, $2,000 to it the avmy of the James on the north | o long while —after all ngements | and our Wall street friend was vietorious | form and tint. A large column, which | ehased through Saunde : ; 00 to §709. O : nded by Generad | should have been made for her departure | but inexprossibly disgusted, Justin this | rose from the floor, on the insidé-part of | have never i R o MO INA s al ¢ some mewh Keeping the n dant out of his | frame of mind lie met Mr. Conner, who, | the table, to the ce was covered with | staut inerease of busin: 2 ¢ 1o clt Line depot; y property f al, Hirst ¢ e Pyosidenc e she madeap: | having accidentally become thoronghly | wreahis of roses, the b aling, courteous tr : . | Dodge, “payic 1,000 rent b up the riv o pub and to the coun- © posted uron the value of the mine, | being also comy irely b live policy must win. Their ls m Mt Pleasant addition, $200 to wents cusy B mMeR again ook horses u Mrs, Lin- ons and other vecuniary aid, i offered to buy him out. Terms were | was quite fairy- . I'his r' isplay nside property is of the 0. §25 down, balunce 3 and §10 | foet on F | il only seventy-five mile e Wty The annnal banquet of the Merchants® The ion of Boston is not a-feast to From “‘the g cling of physical appetite alon by John Reade, Populare Wits i o) joln and Ars. G i an ambu- wiis 10 need for publie ap- *d upon, the control of the mine | surpassed anything of the kind that I'had and improvements in and o 4 2 H§16,600 for each 2 oo, I was deta i e went abroad doi Conuer. The force of work- er seen, It must have cost a fortune, additions, with Belt Line ne- | monthly payments |44 feet, upro t, but asked for a o niou in tha | s things and CArryin [t men at the mine was at once doubled and | for at this season of the year roses commodation and street rs soon to Lots in Saunders & Himebaughs High- [ tween b and 1 ty; for after my experienes of the | honored nwe of i pushed vigorously, and while Mr. | scarce and dear. - Wherdver we went, | come, must certainly result in e prof- | 1,505 05 G fom ¢ ach proyious day 1 did not w he the ¥ | into strange and so 0 Connor was on the ocean the tunuel ran | during our tour, 1 noticed the profuse | its to invest Nothing risked, e 5 e ( er in the earringe. - | puny, for she was greatly negleeted into a vein of ore which thus f v | displuy of roses, which isa very expen- | gained. Be wise and buy f B Dot QIFL o Porter w rdered to juin the party, | feit the negleet. "'While 1 was cousul | feet thick and & \ges #17 per ton in | sive kind of flower with us. But Mr. | Omaha Real Estate and Trust Co., { monthily vaywents. The oKD general at London, Ilearned of her Yiving | free gold, making the actual rese of | Childs Nord to give his friends such | Farnum st., where success will be sure ta { erty in or near the ity nd; as she was the | in an obscure quacter and went to seé | ore in sight in the mine equal to #50 per | delightful threats, for when he showed | follow your purchuses. lead the foliow- ] Lots in Kilby Place M 1o $1,0 Wife of tho commander of an army she | hor. She was toached by the attention, | share forthe stock. As the Phanix stoc me oyer the Ledger ofiice, 1 learned t ing partial list not subject to the order for return; | and when 1 usked her to wy house, for it he New York » - | his newspuper brought him in some h befure that day was over she | seemed wrong that the widow of the man ; Connor may see fit to give | $1,600 a day. This surprised n most bod horself in Washington or any- | who had done so much for us all, shonld Y " bull campaign in the stock, | as much as the machine shop with its six ghero elso uway from the v be ignored by avy Ament pro iends declare he intends to hoid | locomotives a weck. W hat & land Amer ¥ » 5 h re She mounted,and as the ambu: | tive--she v L note of t - | his stock for dividends. i ! I exclamed more than once then ’ ] § ¥ now was (ull, sho romined on her horgo | traying how raro suc os had he- and havo dono o many (mes sinee J o ¥ ¥ o for it wiile by tho Side of the | eoino to her thon. ) heats of i OF MOTIL || BEvom Philudeipiis, 1 went ‘on to sident and ahoad of . Lineol i the ) oman was the of t sutfocating ) speedily ) Vashington, where we were pivea by ™I L X w12 % soon as Mrs. Lincoln discovered | % OF CHICAGO, by using 7. J. H. McLoun's Tar | President Oloveland, at. the white: house, 1804 FPARNAM STRERED. her rage was boyoud all bounds. the fact was wade ¢f that she | Wi Lung Balmi. 25 cents a bottle Mr. Cleveland is very gentlemunly in #