Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 30, 1887, Page 5

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OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY 30 JANUARY ' ==PORTLAND PLACE=== » Special Sale of 100 Lots MONDAY AND TUESDAY NEXT Near Bedford Place== | . | | . e o PRy o L B el - Vv Only cne-fifth cash. with adjoining property. - “ g i om [] AT A N I B AN A T 1 N A : [ cputation in literature or politics, | man who attempted (o rvide over Lis | tney left nave positively repelled the ] I\ Continenlal ! o FIRIRRY i d i iis Y i y repelled them, i THRIS S nau | vy vl I B | receivesan ovation “m: ks iny b | not bo interetptad, and the whole'figld Yot there are Awerfeans or - edueatior | . Phtadaip S mme was contii . I eyes i opher Sly when he | swept proudly down it there stoo importance anxious to imitate, i Governor Thayer Determined to Stop the | incurred, I 5505 ‘ 1 | Who Think woke and found himself in the bed of « | the farmer with musket in hand, and like ot enter, the English -:rnmu Wholesale Granting of Them, Boylston' of ' Buston—Promius o ! if “Its English, -you Kno { lord. “We make no distinction between | the king of France with twice ten thon- | racy, Alas! they often miss even thil h o S ieurred, S losies potl, 51 K erasarved bthalling | i [[mtepioter real emizenon and achievement | sand men, the b i bold rode up a | humble o Formany of the habit < arrag New York minins.ss 2 ‘hase and W oy | and the mevest thivd-rate pretende hill and then e k again. They | copied 1 re not those of the o 2 3 Eeiron tronllamon e S 5 - 3 in. i 1se of the aristod HE RECOMMENDS LEGISLATION. | rmyoro ts s damamnd tor commissions as ‘ R R |[ABINCIARROS ANTEARISTOORACYH Hita Statl aysund SN s A wale swere | had o feudal viglts aud were only tres: | 1 ey : o k4 v bil has | university eireles, a host of the iriel R ke | me fashion, the lo I r's 1 'n from novels or the stage, fash . been introdu y change the | contestants being present at the KGencralGr the Duk cof England and Mr. Pet v even do not find the good demo- | 10ns set by authors or actors who' ha 1 Further Statistics About Insurance | o8 o' Mrocedur wneh author- | M. Clem , of the Oma General Grantand the Dukeof Suther: | ctimes the insignificant fc ot the country willing to give them | never seen the aristocracy or known Jn‘;: Companies—Agitating the Ques- ity if the bill passes. wence of this | of the pio 3 S land—Yanhee ana British Pox- not to blame; he does not set up ad, Wh alady ot the neighbor- | mwanners, and ignorantly followed by thq tion of Municipal Suffrago to aspirants are rushing in thew petitions and a | yiyoel Hanting—Good Habits for a personage, but he finds himself thrust aside, her vehicle broken | Americans as specimens of the high Engq T R lnnl'.;;;In:\n)llf::‘.\l‘.l:ll undoubiedly be issued in l - ardnanonefion Sl iy | lionized alimost be he arrives and herself injured, she absolutely went | lish life and behavior. The exe AR e wns engaged yestorday pre- | Week and was greeted by a very large audi- Butitoreturnitoltbearisto i ; to law with "the ‘would-be aristocrats. | drawl, the langnid manner, the stupid P e st orsaA g | ohce, Who worc greatly delighied with 11 5 But to retury to the atistocracy. Wiion gentry should reserve their sports | stammer, the broadness of specch, tha O e AT Con N A the new county of Box Butte, which was by | Visitol herscitaud company o the ca | NEw Youx, Jan, 27.—[Correspondenco | |1ll' l‘n:"r‘ ri _hlm ean’t cateh a | for regions “where they can own land | insolent stare that are assumed by thosg L e S L 2, | @ voto of the people taken from the south- | cite. § s B ey v T a0 1y they do the next | enough to enjoy themselves in aristo- | who wish to m English, and indeed iovernor Thayer has inangurated a much | ¢, 5hart of the present county of Dawes. | Mrand Mrs. John B of || attos e I AGHARY BB EI0 best thing, and model themselves, as they style, and noton a potato patch | nearly all the peculiarities o languugq needed reform in the matter of obtaining 9% SOMEWIAT EXERCISED, | 12 Wednes tay ) i ¥ | other afternoon, at & fashionable hLou. ifter the origzingl. And nothing | put on the mirs of lords of the manor or | and demeanor imitated in America, arg roquisitions for (ho return o the stato of | There aid aigoud nany eitizons ot Lincoln | Bobmnnon, wio lis bech w40 | hon an En YA is droller to those who have seen the rs of a demesne. but the shadow of a shade; the copy of . parties who violate laws and seck to esea ‘\\“l‘|‘u(“x‘|.: lu”lnn t excited these days over . i / St | atonce the whole party fell to diseussing | Is than to m the antics of the Tis ns good as a sereaming arce to | some poor cockney, himselt the eariea- bill giving munieipai fran- | | mimic In conversation a few d; from justies The copyists dress themselves, | see alittle “field” of twenty or thirty | ture of a lofty original, *rowdiit, of Madison, Wis chise to women is the approx rringe of an wble o become n law. | g0 tho governor expressed surprise at the | Lo ) O : e B e O D ] i - 1 they think, like the high English, and be’ | people, the men in regulafion “pink,” | @The real behavior of the great Engli nor | srophecy is freely made that it the bill can belle with the son of 4 4 g A ) & & pink, avior of the great English demands of this kind that had come {o bls | srais s yrabibition will ba enacted in | . C. E, Wilkins, formerly of Lincolh, un f" it gho son o 8 riti [ canse in the autumn“when the' English | with ‘high “top boots and hunting | is simple, though sometincs arrosanty notice during his first month of service, and | the d b cities and towns in the state | down from Broken Bow pist weelk e forcigner said that the fan i the | aristoc |\K re in the country they wear ches, following—not a fox, but a bax | The superciliousness which one not sin any | visit of business and pleasure at bridegroom was very amixble, and likely | country clothes, these followers of a | of anise’ sced tied to a horse’s tail; | born to tl | to party securing a requisition he laia | than could bo brought about in ¥ X ther v, A" it is bolie down the statement with vigor that if the | Oher yay, and it s believed ©hat requisition, as granted, was used simply 1o | the women of - Lineoln that a pro- l. ¢ “manor”’ never catches; a turned off by | carclessness of others that comes not I calling this fox | from intending to aflront, but from a n invite Englishmen nuine indiflerence impossible to atfect; 1 that | home | i 15, Gordon has cone to Denver, at whieh | 10 ne time on | hauten hout any | fashion they do’ not understand, sport | stopped by the farmers an | traveling suts wrhy hats in 1 the old women— | Fifth Avenue shman of posi- [ hunting. They ¢ t the newcomer w L “for,” he added, coolly, “in will be detained for s s matters 0 bring the offender back to the state fo hibition mavor and council would be elec : 1he that, whi s w mar- | tion is seer ¢ X : § ioi 5 L 5 ,,,.,,,fwl“,,m,llmmma,mh,h‘.ff;n‘i:;,‘,“’”,:l:“fi B rion ot e v M s, Woodruf, who have i ll‘... that, whou there = @ mar | towis soon in Londen except in . high | to join them; real lords and sports- onsciousness of a superiority so rec criminal prosoout Do fltha o i "¢ | fionts 1incolnites takes a_wide range, and | iting with friends in Lin have | ith a person without rank or v ihat and adark ocout; a - jacket | men, and these Enghsh go to the | ognized as to be almost forgotten. Noth- I lon that the law required {1 e'o fio Tiquor dealers themselves a good | returned home to Haitford, Conn, | ion, the reception is sometimes not | Or - twed 1 is unknown [ country of preserves and privilege, o mg of this exist an exist where <for offenders returned to the state, that he | many real estate men view the prospect as | D 8. Maltby, of Des Mong prominent | cordial.” 1 bridicd up mentally this, | 1 Pall Mall or 1y, unless one | many a joke they tell about the the people who iority neither | would see 10 1t that the parties securing the | detrimental (o thenselves and their proyerty | 911 .:: },\”“‘y‘(mm’.t.“-m(.. Modern Woodmen, | and wa. tung veady to say: “That is | 15 simply passing through town ere- | erats who aspired to their company and | feel it nor possess it; and where the ghow o requisition papers should be prosecuted for | interests, ulu: ~nm:“luus .ul;m [0 l',u]t. _'. a7 Wil | very well in and, but Ameri- | fore, not a man in 10 sets | thought themselves avistoerats becanse | of it 18 re ted a8 soon as manifested, perjury. To those who have watched pro- | 0l ;;fll;g“_ul”r‘: l(‘flm;hu”"'m“"-()"_';“:.‘!““"‘\’ T e Al o) | cans think the young ladies, in | up for fashion can seen before Christ- | they wore red co: ind hunters because | No one have the English maunner ceediugs in requisitions the past few years | i 0 I . | tives at Nora, 11l good compa to the first [ mas exceptin aderby hat and perhaps a | they rode after anise seed which spurious demoerats s0 much ad- question of municipal suffrage, therefore, they Lave not failed to notice that they have | will be ve ly canvassed by the in W been granted in large numbers, and that in | habitants of the capital ity and undoubtedly | stafl. ha ¥ 0 ‘tilement 3 ave | ® powes o both sides watch [ trice Expre numerous cases settlements on them haye [ & powerful lobby on bot les will wat Harry Durfee is howe to Lincoln from an tormer! the 1 pted @ position with nd departed for that eity, iywhere,” | sinble host shooting jacket. They think it is | | ! 3 - | ca d my p L ind got the | style I me: *Yes,” The replicd” meekiy, “so | dead of w ! izlish WIIAT ENGLISIT LIKE IN AMERICAN mir » the mark! Even now m the For the scorn of a genuine oristc you may notice some ultra | for his copyist is intense. Many a unl riority, eflort, o ss other people admit the supe- r this manner is the opposite of asscrtion, or pretense. Even | roceedings. ] anv Amc rls have marricd into | exquisites of a Sunday afternoon parad- | or duke likes a real republican; they re- | when it is roal i I thi been made without criminal proseeution. | Vroccedings. - e e Hany o Lincoln drons an limany o | cs of a by 4 e like publican; they re- [ when'it is real it is no better than the im- L L09RNLOR ) ABOUT THE CITY : gxtended visit with triends and relatives In f swmilies of distmotion 1n_England, | country suits to show an ae- | speet aman who stands up for his coun- | 1tators might nave without cflort and the | 8 6q The tire reported in yesterday’s Bee from J. 1L McMurtry and daughter, w ot been pleasantly received, that we | quaintance with foreign modes. ~ An [ try and its institutions; they believe in | effort always fails. | sitions and the bringing back of offenders | this city was fully as expensive as firststated, Mus d 1o know this one s likely to find a | Englishman, it is true, may sometimes | Americans who declare themse e s self- | There is indeed abundance in England for removing morlgaged property, for obtain- | '.','."‘-'xf.'-:f'u'x.A‘|“T.‘.T\fm"l ‘llm;"‘:l‘l‘lll:;"»l ,‘I":"‘”f“"“‘l"‘:“ Linosln Thursday better weleome,” | could have bitten | walk onr strects in such costume, hecause | mad y like many American customs | and in the English to admire, and to em= | 1ng money under false pretenses, and hke | pEEOGEIER RERURENG GATIE RS O o | Mis. M. Husted lias gone to Chicazo for | my lips i rage, | at the quict inso- | he consuders New York provineial, but if [ and admire many Ameriean women; but | nlate, if not ta'imitate. But 'the disease offenses, a rich field to cultivate, for in such | ganage fixes it at 51,500, fully covered by in- | tWo weeks' visit with friends in that city | lence with which the stranger assum | he should do it at home he would be the | what they do not understand 15 why | that is called Auglomania is in realify | cases the state pays tho bills, Some of these M. I. Massey, who has been in the boot and | the superiorty of knglish rank to any- | langhing stock of tho cubs or caricatured 1s and - democrats should pre- | aristocratomanin, Its victims do not imi- | bill have C. Burr yesterday pur- | £hoe business in Lincoln, has returned to his | thing in America; and the nity Fau long ago as the | tend to ne through the usual routine in at they can never attain, what | tate the law rs, the men of letter, the un in | o 5 o O e SESlerdyy B | forwer home in Decatur, 1. 0 AL | 0: | ) ) ] ; | Aoy ! b sho past and been paid when they bave been | ehased tho residence proporty of 15 L Robe | FOEREIOWE Siowar Yot Brownville, was a | with wiicll the ri- | daysof Fia Divolo. Lord Allcasl wi whole worlknows we clim o merchants and manutacturers, who give scarcely itemized at all, and & reviow of thew | borts on N sireet for 8500 Tl very near | ¢ D S X SN ante Whtra e hus Dbchupa there ative | drossed as asatire in the style that some irded; why we should throw aside | England her power and glory and impots might produce some interesting figures, The | is further eireulated that vight in that vi v | many friends and acquaintanees. lity., o | New \quu fen aflect who think they tional “dignity and character to | tance to-day, but peers and peeresses who r covernor has given notice that these claimsin | is to be erectod the coming spring and suu Mixs Cora 1. Hosman, who has been visit- ow ean we wonder, if the | know the wo in the borrowed plumes of an | take them for all in all, arc less deserving ith relatives in Lin rned to her homw In {01 Some we in Duluth, Minn, think us imferior, when people of di | Then, in England where the elimate is on submit to their wdescension, and | mild and the winters are warm, where [ of imitation by Americans than of ¢ A acquaintance told the | any class in England, These imi- future wust be itemized in every particular, | ey & large hotel to eclipse auything In an luterview with the governor on this | e Missourinver, iy s I'oliceman Malone was in Creston yester- e arey out the humnility in nets as well as | have seen roses blooming in the open air riuth when he said that the high English | tators arc especially it to rate question .,n.quumn. he said that it was | oy where he went to get a man named The Philharmonic Concert. words. T} ywded around the duke | atChristmas, and snow isaimost unknown | are unwilling to receive Americans intg | of family iltl'\vm\l)“’Iw]:h they fiuuk his purpose to urge some needed logislation orton, who is the chap who assaulted 1’a The second concert of the Philharmonie | of NSutherland, the other day at (they have no naine for sleighs, and 1 | their familie; More than one, or two, | the distinguishing mark of aristocracy; in the law M these matters, and thess pur liceman Guntrini on the government squars poses he has formed and ‘presented to the [ about two weeks ago. iceman Malc egislature In a special wessage. In this | telegraphed to headguarters in this city yes- communication he uses the followlng lan- | terday t he nad his man and he Is ex- sunge: ' Requisitions are frequently sought, | pected home with him to-day, am led to believe, for the return of alle,ed Police ofiicers were notitied yesterday of fugatives rom justice to the state for the | parcel of stolen goods that were found n purpose ot ‘enforcing the collection | the warerooms of the Wisconsin Furniture | 4. Minnet, for dtriug Quintette. . Boc orcliestra will be given at Boyd’sat & o’clock | party, a8 if he had be man— | them Amer this afternoon, ‘The following is the pro | their duke, a nd they his vassals; there | with great ¢ gramine: . wus even a b pe to play for his | December n sledges); there the people | or half a dozen well-known Amcrican | yet tho very men of greatest deeds and | Jouses fil thew in | women have married within the last ten | most illustrious names from whom some | " ! wd February, b an out- | years into noble houses in England and | of them have sprung, were sclf-made, Brandels | grace as he entercd the room; and 1 door life i bleand agrecable, There- | in nearly every instance the beads of | and if they were alive’ to-day, would be Thomas | told th omen of position were taken | fore in the cgion when the | those houses exerted themselves to pre- | called parvenus in Englaud, while the Bial | up and presented to him till he got tived, | thermometer is below zero, and the | vent the marriage; disgraceful condi- | elaims of the “oldest” American families rini | and exelaimed o one of his cronies: 1 | ground covered with snow for months, | tions have been intposed before the ¢ to gentility would be scouted by English 1 | { 1. March, Na Of " w debt or compromising with | coump: “The goods consisted of some silk | 5. Ballad, The two Grenadiers., .. Schumann | don't s v the grandehile { cob- en the blasts g ost penetrating ; could > ot f ) ) ; 9FL T the accused In cases “x"t'"' uw‘n"vn»e | mm\l [n‘--l», N u]uml \-;\flu nlln‘n\\‘ other Mr. Courad Sclimidt, \[]:f': “mfl“fi, r|h;u.7\m. :lu‘&‘.\‘{ ,Arl 'fu' "’“l”lln -‘.\x:"!lllh\-”;.>|-«]::\ l‘nuwl‘ Inl‘f;n"‘”!:- ’xlml:'“f:}t :‘:Imt‘nu(x;:‘l\irlm:uh-rlnnl"1““:;‘;':h “,:‘(.f,h ‘1:‘5 .'Ilu'flt “l}:t‘ : ;,u.‘l‘n:““ ':A l.:m s or 1#0&“ RSl oon g AMIIE Jlonay URCEE | MO Hakon fom A ate thought (0 | 0. “lioniinissences oF Tanuhauser, © | must have @ sovercian contempt for the | must imitate the English-mode. They | and insulled by tue aristocratic | defice among pissmires, mortgaged property. Expenses ineurred in | room. i : 7. Largo, for Sting Orelicstra, Organ dnd | republicans who abase themsclves before | too must open their country Liouses, built | connections to whose _society she Apay BAapeav, veturning fugitives are paid by the state, and | The receipts of the West Lincoln Stock Piano.... ..o S U adel | bim, whose principal perional disting hed for summer, wod invite | aspired. If beauty or genius eohguere —— the state 15 thus made the instrumentality | yards vesterday were 900 head of rather an Violin solo, Mr. Naban Franko tion in London is that he runs with fice | “country hou parties” o sports that | ut last, 1t was sometimes not till the hus Crelghton Helghts. for the collection ot debts in suchi cases, in- | inferior guality, and consequently prices fell | 8. Gavotte. Amaryllis...... King Louis X111 | machine, and in tls country that he rly kill them by the exposure, They | band had pawned the 5 of his Amer: 5 than two wecks ago a syndicate eom- stead of brinzing the accused to punishuoient | off slightly, ruling yesterday from $4.50 to [ 9. Cornet Soio, “Once Again™. I, Sullivin | owns a railroad and w the engine er and fr and suller, and sowe- | jcan wife, or both had suffered, or al of W. II, Al ar, 7. Spal - for the commission of 8 crime, J Fesneotfull or Bundred, Afr. Henry Lutz, with his own ducal hands » nes die; they take diphtheria and pneu- | most starved; within sight of their 8, Alexauder, Lr. Spalding, W Tecommend the passage of o liw which shall T. . A+ NEWS OF A WET 10, Potpourri, Le Pericliole Offenbach O IR ATty AND TR DU WAGH Gl WG AR e Rkl &6 B Mhuzhty and ssmiroyal rolsives.. Tyon | A+ Kubn, A, I, Glun, J, I McCulloch, J proyide that (n cvery case whoors the party Arbuckle, of the ilarlan Time | 10 Sercuade, for String Quattetie....... SILE GENISOL AND SHE DUKE, ey ro hgonics of torture | hauguly and sami-roval palalves. Vel | 0, Whianery and €, D, Wopdwartl on whose oath the warrant was Issued ehail Lo Doyt. of the astings {ndey DOSZKOWEL . s e orssss He owns a cou besides, and when | because the high English go to the coun- | then success did not always Jast. An | 500 ca o or | L W 1 fail to prosecute erinnnally and enter into a t the club roonts last week . 12, Wallz, Dolores Walidtenfel | General Grant yisiied him he chanced to | try at the some time American who might one diy be a pe Plkoy LSTAR. 08 JRUG LIME RAY and compromise with the offender, such paity at on the erand ball ana ban- B be at a station on & railroad some dis FOOLING WITH THE FOX, ©ss i3 said to be planning u return to her | W08 Orchard hill and shrists ned the prop: Whoke (nstance the warkant was issicd suall | quot to be given the coming month report | Go 10 South Omaba today and buy | tance from his castle. Grant hada spe- | 8o, too, the English huut, an for- | democratic home, aud unother, n march. | £ny JCreighlon Heiglts" The Chleighte ch were placed in the ). and tho C. W, Mount be liable to the state for the ful tlattering for an imu cial car, and se he duk ne. Bu at- | sgome of those beautiful residence and , he sent to | sooth must do the | unt of ‘\ Prospects ve English | ioness, bas been discarded by her hus- | hands of Benewa & puts nothing in the w te casis 10 futurning dio CYsive (o sie udanoo e Iy “"{"fl‘,f‘:,{]')‘“‘l"\“l‘m?‘:‘l"::: valusble trackage lofs, (being the nea invite his host s it. 'His grace, | possess great estates and preserve their | band, her coronet a mockery. and her- | Investment company for sale. Ahrough the ate beeryed that the governor | of visitors Milteomo Brui (it ahAA IS | trackage for sale in South Omaba). These | however, also by ri e b Kinown | gamos thoy keep livo foxes aud have u | self refusod at court, though wdmitiedly | entroctie work of thess coterplising real lots are located on the main line of the | that th prosecution of this class o winals, but he | Grand Isiand. . sin the train, but | right under the Enghsh law to ride oyer | without fault estate lirms last of the property wus dis- proposes that the state shall not become a Tie tollowing is a partial list of the. visit- | Union Pacitic railw within ten min- | had not seen fit v his respeets. | the crops and fields of their tenants, or ‘These are the ways of the very high | Posed of yesterday gt prices ranging from collection ageney or an emploviuent bureau. | ors who have ealled at the T, P. A. rooms | utes’ walk of the sto; schange build- | When at last he entered the car, he took | the prerogative is stipulated in their | aristocrats. Lower down, among the ‘#'\'" ‘l“:h':{‘l;\ll d ) I‘:'-lhlu-;n“vln‘ v‘vz . ey, DS 5 P y pasteweek: W. Spenee, St | ing i a are P )ains Lo g at he was 5. .y e anc e sctions COTS, p g: | Colnposed hd f b, SOLULIO B o THE PHENIX HEADS 1HE LIST, Lur the pastsweek: W nee, S| ing in South Omaha, und are known as | pains to nt that he was | 1 They bunt ou their own land. A | connections of peers, it is sam ©stato firus montioned and thelr employes In the continuation of the annual returns | L W. F. Walkel of the insuranes companies doing business in | Lewis, Chicago; B. M. Wilsey, Blaix the state, the two companies that headed the | Jolns, Pacitie Express company: € B, List two yenrs azo have filed their igures, and on, Kausas City C. Keid, Valparaiso: while they will head the list in the pres- | K. HL Cuthbert, Omahas John Mulloney, St. ent year, both show a decrcase in business, Paul; E. L. Haff, Chicago; C. il Carson, | V there by lest the man who had | lord with an estate of 50,000 acres invites | even these think theimselves better than | twents-five in all v sovereigns should sup- | a party to ride to hounds. Thercfore, on | the rest of the world, thouzh they b club st night dition is across the ad track pose that the duke of Suth: nd had | Long Island, where a man may hold, per- | only rubbed against the v ity; and the | cellent work from Albright's choice addition, come thus far to greet him. He doubt- | haps, a 100 acres, and his next neighbor mets and knights and “honorat, sold Th one week., 1f you want | less thought he was paying Grant an | is s farmer, as much a proprietor as he | are as indignant when American duugh- Jefteris' replat, Terms 10 per ce balance on monthly ‘nts a banquet at the Omaha tin appreclation of thoir ex= $1,000 Per Acre 4 fact that is true also of alwost every otl Owaha; Albert Voorhees, Newark; C. E. | choice lots don’t delay. Omaha property | honor to réeeive him at ali--a mere sol- | is, the imitator of aristocracy scts up @ proposed to then us dukes @nd | 1 have 3; acres of land § 1 ¢ of company. The Nebraska & fowa is the see- | Wilkenson, Broken Bow:' W. H. 'Rayner, | 1s all good, but South Omaha has given | dier who Lad happened to be presi- | kennel, nd attempts o follow themselyes. Wowen bearing | South Omaha, at §1,000 p o; e oud in the list, and the returns received at | Omaha; Leévi Cox, Phillips: 1L F. Hubbard, | the Jargest and quickest returns. For sale | dent of a democrucy. When the duke | the hounds. But bhis neighbor pro t names in Ameriea, names that | well, and bargain, If not sold thi the auditor's office yesterday from differant | St Louis, Temple Plerce, Boston at the office of T. C. Jefleris, next door | was next in New York General Grant | tests; he i3 no tenant bonnd to : obseure, although aristocratie, in | Week will be platied. gompanics niake 'IMP“'“"W““‘ powiag: | . A0CLAL SOTES AND PERSONALS: om- | 0 the postoflice, South Omaha, or on the | called on him, but his grace neglected to | allow the descendant of u feudal lord | England, but' haye bLeen made distin GrovER STEVENS, | Ty o e o' paid, | paratively speaxing, tuis lsst one past. | rounds. return the visit. A to destroy his fences and trample on his | guished by public services and brilliant 218 5. 154h § | e o, L L e Toawniina | Among She most bieasing, bowever, of the | .. - [t is not only dukcs—genuine grandees | crops. Not long ugo ono of uieso far. tulent hers—have been barely welcomed - . 55.811.44; losses incurred, $14.010.01; losses | different gatherings wus the informal recep- Fiye acres in Sonth Omahafors ale at | —to whom Ameri :m“.mi this sickening | mers gave notice fo a gallant master of | to Lomes not cqual to their own, and Conkling Plac ~aid) 814,410,0L Home of New York—Premi- | tion yiven to the mewmbers of the Chautau- | bargain EvANs & Jou NsoN. | howmage; but every Englishman with & | the boun s that "< would shoot the first | familics of less distinction thau those | On Leavenworth street. B i

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