Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Every Garment Sold Is Pres-ed and Fitted ‘o Cus'omers THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY e o e A i S EPTEMBER 4. 1887.~SIXTEEN PAGES. 'HE FALL CAMPAIGN IS INAUGURATED To Make the Attack a Complete Victory. We Shall Open All Along the Line Today and Sweep the Field with Our Unparalelled Bargain Sale. 3 Diplomas Received Neb. State Fair, Best Display Clothing Elgutter’s Mammoth Clothing House 1001 Farmnam=st., Corner 10th. OVERCOATS!|A BOMB EXPLODED| HATS, [Merchant Tailor We Open Our Batteries With IG.IA.IR.] SUITS. Bood Blue Flannel.. ... ....$7.50 Warranted Best Middlesex.. 9.75 (@. A. It Buttons on hand.) 1.00 6. A.R Wool Hats. . .. .... 6. A. R. Extra Quality Hats.. 1.75 We will clothe 00 peoplo who enjoy well-made and well-fitting garments with fine grade Cork - Screws In Black, Blue or Wine. Bound to sell them at the remarkable low price, 10 Suitl! Who does not want to wear the reliable, hard- weurin, SCOTCH GooDS! PLAID ‘73;"5_0 CHEVIOT $ 755'100 CASSIMERES, Buitablo for Business Sults, Wo pleaso evory- body, our styles are infinite in varicty. Examine them at $i2. $is. 18, Thore are visitors among us this week who oome not only to laok at battle-scared warriors, but to join tho great army of double-blessed noes. To such prospective bridekro.ms. wo offer WEDDING SUITS, Prince Albert or Cut-Away, Imported Ding- gonals, Very fine, Tallor Made. Extra fine, Satin Lined 8mall cheoks, noat vat- terns in Brown or Drab, Soft,pliable, all wool Desirable Shades. Fall and Winter Welghts. Tailor- Made, Complete Line from $2.00 (0 §35.00. PANTS. We Sold $20,000 Worth During the P Seasons. We're Geolng to Break the Record Now. 800 pair Pants, brown, black, grey. .§ 800 pair Pants, fine strtpe 250 pair Pants, worsteds. 200 pair Pants, checks, stripes. 175 pair Pants, imported. .. 200 pairs Pants, yery fine ' We have Pants to fit every mat big or little, fat or slim. BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT. The castern market was over- stocked. We bought cheap. Kilt Suits, to close.. .. . $1 50 Union CassimerePlaids. 2 Pomeroy Mills. Pleated, very g % SCHOOL SOITS. Nice Dark Checks. Something Heavier. Brown Cassimere. Scotch, desirable shades . Fine Diagonal. 175 Boys lhu?: Pants....... 25¢ 5. 100 Boys’ Panl 75 10 to 17 In Our Furnishing Goods Department, Knocking Prices Sky High. See What Bargains You can pick up 80 Doz. Unlaundried Shirts. 50 Doz. Unlaundried Shiris. Old gold nice grade for those who prefer some weight, fall and winter ...... . Red flannel medicated. The right article for rheumatism......... Fine assortment fancy striped wool English and California flannels Among the Fragments. silk corded ends..........00eus Medium weight, grey or white, just right for fall . . “o‘lar’. 8 cases fancy staiped merino, balbriggan lisle thread Neckwear. Linen Gollars. Nice line of tecks in 4 latest designs of silk 3 ply Coon Collar to close. ... Linen bosom, the body made of Wamsntta muslin....... - 456 4 ply linen bosom, Reinforced back and front, worth laundried $1.50 ssc Made with famous wire buckle, will not tear the clothing or suspender. Ever pair warranted zsc - 15¢ e 25Cy 35C, 45€ Our whole second floor is devoted to our Hat Department. This! is guarantee that we carry the largest and bést selected stock in We have all Omaha., the leading brands. DEPARTMENT, —_— Suits Made o Order from Measure for 20 to §30. We put in lest of workmanshi Our prices are as low as cloth a good tailoring warrant. Samples The Weu-known soft and rules for uelf-measm‘emu" crown “Tiger Hat," “Stich Pocket” And the Famous John B. Stetson. In StiffHats wecarry both Domestic and En- glish, 1n all the latest designs and shades. sent to any address. 150 Styles of Goods. Our garments do not shrink $n rain storm, Do not get out of shape, Do mnot look like ready-made chothes. Seams do not rip. Buttons do not come off. If this is the kind of clothes you want, call on us. We are sole agents for California Blankets, Underwear, Clothing made by ORE{ON CITY WOOLEN MILLS We don’t buy job lo!s to palmn off on our trade. Our goods are all fresh, in season, selected for us by competent buyers who ransack eas'ern markets to find just what we want, R EDUCATIONAL UNIFICATION, The Labors of the Methodist Episcopal Ohurch in Nebraska, PROSPEROUS INSTITUTIONS, York the First on Record —Bishop Fowler's Visit-—The University at Lincoln—Good Work for Ed- ucation, {Written for the Sunday Bee by Hon, G,W. Frost.] Perhaps in no way can the immense strides that Neobraska has taken in the 1ast deeade be shown than by a resume of the educational work of the different denominations during that time, The prairie has not only been made to “bud and blossom as the rose,”” but the incom- ang thousands from all parts of the world, that have settled in the rich valleys and plains, have first of all made provision for the education of their children. The sod house, the frame building and the brick structure, some of them second to mone in the country, have followed each other in quick succession. Perhaps noth- fng so much surprises the foreigners ‘who visit the west as the cheerful liberal- ity with which the government, the state, and individuals endow the common school, the seminary, the college and the university. The Methodist Episcopal church has not been behind in this on- ward movement in the cause of educa- gion. It might seem premature to talk of ‘four institutions of the higher grate in Nebraska for one church, but those who ©avil must remember that the present decade will show at least 1,200,000 people in our state, and with the cry echoing trom all our borders—"'still they come.” Illinois, with Chieago,the most wonder- ful city that the world has scen in s phenomenal growth, and with its hun- dreds of other cities and towns all along its great lines of travel, and on its wide~ tretching lake, is said not to be one- twelfth developed in her latent resorces. Af that is a fact, what will Nebraska be when her first thirty-five years' growth bring a million and more within her bor- ders, and the next decade will doubtless more than double the number of her citizens. There is room then for these educa- tional institutions, and the best time to locate them is while land 1s cheap and let the broad acres secured become a fund in the near future to sustain and build up schools that shall become a power in our state and take their places among the honored institutions of the world. Nevraska, we believe, is the first state to carry out the recommendations of the meral conference, the highest body e church, and with all her educational interests the Methodist body, as a ohurch, is perhaps the best united in all efforts, both religious and educational, than any other church, save one, in the country, and with all the bonds that bind them together it may be given front rank. NEBRASKA METHODISM has four institutions of learning under the care and patronage of this church York has the_honor of being the first on the record. Tt was started as a seminary and subsequently assumed the character d took the chartered rights of a college. has been quite successful under the jclent management of Dr. Edward | hompson, a son of one of the most ed of our bishops, snd subsequently | position there. been under the care of Rev. Dr. Kaig, who, with his grea: force of.: vnt. character and diligent labor, is making himself felt in his new sphere of work. Another college has been chartered and a good beginning made at Central City, on the Union Pacitic miwng. Rev. D. Marquette 18 at the head of this insti- tution, and with the generous gift of land and aid from the churches, itis hoped that the crisis will soon be passed, and the school will become a prominent part of the educational work in the state. Each of these nstitutions repre- sents what is known in the Methodist church as an annual conference. The state has _grown so rapidly that from one small conference there ‘are now three, with about one hundred members each. The western part of the state, the frontier, has shown wonderful vit: ity in the work of the church, and Rev. Allen Bartly conceived the idea of build- ing a vniversity at a peint on the B. & M. in Red Willow county. He held 2,000 acres of land, and two-thitds ot this he gave to found the Malialieu university. When_Bishop Fowler made his official visit to Nebraska last Septem- ber he found these struggling institutions in_their incipiency, and more or less de- veloped. He immediately advised a uni- fication of all the educational interests of the church. with a central university,and these schools as feeders for the one grand institution. It was a hard struggle for the schools to consent to the change and give up the idea of a college or university at every point named, but when the com- missioners met, appointed from the three annual conferences, and discussed the matter, the whole plan seemed 8o natural and feasible and wise that they, with a little mental reservation that has now passed away, adopted the SUGGESTIONS OF BISHOP FOWLER, and subsequently they all fell into line, marching from the north and south and east and west, an_educational phalanx, toward the central university. On the 15th of December, 1886, the commissioners met in Lincoln, and, after carefully canvassing the matter, it was decided’to accept what was considered the best offer, $276,000, and locate the uinversity at the Capital City. ‘The location 18 some three miles east of city, and embraces a goodly number ot broad acres, and of course a larger number of lots to be sold for the benelit of the institution. A building is in course of erection that will cost $70,000, and is a part of the donation of the generous den- nizns of the capital city to secure the lo- cation Invitations are already outand secat- tored over the state to those interested,to attend the ceremonies of the laying of the corner stone on September 22, the date of the annual session of the Nebras- ka conference. Bishop J. F. Hurst,D. D., will deliver the address, and an oppor- tunity will be given to purchase lots from the plat of the University place. The leaders of this enterprise have shown excellent judgment, and the schools have qivuu their cheerful acquiesance to the whole plan; and it seems that much more can be accomp- lished in this way than by separate schools and seperate interests. The col- leges at York, Central City and Bartly well educate their Yupils ns far as 1s usual in colleges in the sophomore year and then transfer to the university. The trustees of the university will be chosen from the three conference in equal numbers. ‘T'he university will prescribe the text books for ull the schools, so as to have uniformity in the course of study and will confer all degrees. The schools, it is thought, ean be run with much less expense in this way, and ve' reach and educate the masses in the communities that they represent more efti- ciently than in separate schools of high grade. A large proportion will graduate at the colleges, and never enter the univer- aud,yet,to those who take the higher se of the university it will be a con- stant incentive to strive for entrance and There can be no doubt but what these schools, located in differ- tions of the state, will give & mueh larger percentage of university students than could be secured in any other W"Y{ The united force of the whole churei will thus be centered in THE UNIVERSITY, and as soon as its work and aims are fully ynderstood, men all over the state will fivu of their means to sustain and develope an institution that is a represen- tative of the church at the seat goverament. The main building and the grounds are fim from the citizens of Lincoln, not to incoln, but to the great Methodist family of the state iirst, and then to all denomifations who desire to educate their children at the university. 1t be- comes the property of every church and station. and all should feel an equal in- terest in building up an institution that shall be an honor to the church and the state-and the great church that is repre- sented by so many universities and col- leges and schools all over the land. All differences about location, and other minor misunderstandings should be forgotten, and a rallying cry should go up from all the churchesand all the friends of education, to help on the good work for the beneiit of this and the com- 1ng generations, The chancellorship of the university will be held by Rev. C. F. Creighton, D. D.. a man overy way fitted by character, abil- ity and education for such a position. e is an earnest, conscientious, aggres- sive man who will honor the position, and make the university an honor to the church, The church as one man should come up to the aid of this enterprise, with prayers and gifts and legacies, and sacrifices even, untl it stauds on a firm basis, and becomes a joy and delight and strength, not only to the denomination, but to the sacred cause of education throughout a state peopled with millions from every nation and chime under the sun. he trustees are moving on in their work in a very eflicient’ manner, and will, by constant attention and earnest effort, soon have the university ready for occupancy, and, with Dr. Ureightoun at the head and an able corps of professors and instructors, we predict that the uni- versity will soon take front rank with the educational institutions of this and other states. Much of this information has come from Rev. Dr. T. B. Lemon, who is one of the oldest and most honored of all the men who have done such good work for education and the church since the settlement of the state. He now holds the position of edncational agent for the Methodist Episcopal church throughout the state and is doing good work for the university. —_— MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. of Mrs, D. P, Bowers will revive *“The Czar- ina” during her coming season under larry W. Sewall’s management. ‘The Carleton Opera company will open the Philadelphia operatic season at the Walnut in the latter part of September. During Minnie Palmes’s Australian tour the commedienne’s profits were large, aud she closed at Sydney some $30,000. Mme, Papoenheim will sing at the forth- comm(uWurc«sler. (Mass.) musical festival, and will afterward make a tourof the United States. Colonel Mapleson with Arditi as conduc- tor and Mme. Nekita, & phenomenal soprano is giving concertsat her majesty’s theatre, London. Mijs Esther Jacobs, the handsome con- tralto, who sang at fashionable Parisian concerts with much success, has sailed for New York city, Mrs. Langtry and Charles Coghlan have uarreled, and the Langury has thrown Joghlan overbuard in genuine cold-blooded English tashion, Carl Rosa, the London English opera im- presario, writes that his company would visit this country if its eXpenses were guar- anteed in advance. Joset Hotman, the wonderful ten year old iano virtuoso, secured by Henry E.” Abbey or a tour of this country, Wil arrive from Europe early next month, Grace Hawthorne, the unknown American actress who went to london. and became lessee of the Princess theatre, threatens to return and play several months in this country next winter, Colonel McCanll has secured the American rights for “*Captain Fracasse,” the new opera by Dellinger, author ot “Don Cuwsar,” and “Lorraine,” and will present it for the first time in English in New York. Frau Nicmann Raabe, the great Berlin actress, wife of Niemann, the tenor, and Herr Ludwig Barnay have been secured by Manager Heinrich ° Conried for a three months’ term in New York city. Manager Edmund C._Stanton of the Met- ropolitan opera house, New York, is engaged in forming a Wagner musical soclety, which will provide concerts, essays and lectures on Wagner and other great composers. Manager Charles E. Louck is endeavoring to form a grand owfm company from the material of the late National Opera company and if successful, proposes to Fmvme a sea- son of English opera at popular prices. Bolassy Kiralfy’s production of Sardou’s latest spectacle, entitled ‘“‘Dolores,” it is promised by the manazement of the Chest- nut street opera house, Phila., will surpass anything ever seen on the American stage. A revolving fan has been invented which makes sixty revolutions a minute, dl-imm its edges into a basin of perfume, the edor ol which it wafts to all parts of the house, The machine rests in the orchestra next to the leader, and is ornamental as well as userul. Miss Marie Wainwright has been asked by Salvini to play Desdemonia during the great Italian’s London engagement this autumn. The young*tragedienne’s season with her husband, Louis James, opens in this city on September 12 at the Grand Opera house, so nr&n is forced tu refuse the complimentary offer, Mabel Sterling, a lovely Kentucky belle of aristocratic family, has_abandoned ‘a luxur- iant home and an envied social position to become an actress. After considerable study Miss Sterling will begin her stellar career in anew musical comedy by Scott Marble,author of “Over the Garden Wall,” g@antitled *“Three Corners.” Mr. John F. Ward opens his season at the eoples theatre in Williamsburg, on the 12th in *“Lhe Doctor.” Mr. Snyder Rosen- field’s adaptation from the German of *“Dr. Clauss,” which was seen a few years ago in Boston, Philadelphia and San Francisco, Mr. Ward will play the part of Higgins, the servant whose endeavors to imitate the doc- tor furnish much of the fun of the comedy. o i EDUCATIONAL. Mr. W, L. Gilbert, of Hartford. Conn., has given $400,000 to found an institution for friendless boys and girls in that elty. Dr. Karl Hegel, professor of history in tho university of Erlangen, and son of the ramous philosopher, celebrated recently the fiftieth anniversary of his doctorate, Through the munificence of Mr. Paul Tu- lane, of P N. J.. &n extensive man- ual training school for white boys has been established 1n_convection with the ‘L'ulane university at New Orleans. Madison university hasthis year established twenty-two new scholorships, the funds having been secured with which to sustain them. Entrance examinations are to be held in about twenty cities and tawns in which Baptist influence is centered. Prof. J. B. Hensha pupd of Dr. Sar- gent at tarvard, has been added tothe faculty of Randolph-Maeon colleze, Va., which'is reported to be she first colleze in the sou I’to give physicial eulture a place in its teachfng on an equality with its leading subjects of study. Prof. Drummond’s visit to this country is for the purpose of making & tour of the col- leges as soun as the fall term onens. He will be accompanied by Profs. Greenield and Simson, both of whom are emlinent members of the medical faculty at Edinburg, and by two medical students. “Volapuk,” the new universal language, was the subject of an Inte lecture by Colonel Cliarles E. Sprague, at University building, New York, last week. Volapuk, Colonel Sprague said, means world-speech, but this is ot a good name, as the language is not intended to be spoken among mnru- ple of any pati but only to be used in correspondence among people of different nations. “International language” would ‘be a better term. Attempts to make a com- mon lunguage date back to about the year 1 . D, The present system, Volapuk, was devised h{' Father Schleyer, a Gerinan l»rlanl. and published in 183L° 1v now has 00,000 students in Europe. six period 5 are devoted to it, and hout - sixty soeleties are striving to introduce 1t SIGHT SEEING IN LONDON, A Bee Correspondent's Visit to the Metropo- lis of the World, THINGS NOT ENGLISH YOU KNOW Reception in Fashion—Buffalo Bill's She@—The American Ex- hibit—Franz Sepel’s Letter, LoNDON, August 20.—[Correspondence of the B —A short ride on the Great Western railway from Oxford, brought us to what we had been looking forward to as one of the most important points ot our tour, the city of London. But I can say very little concerning London that 1s new. KEvery one who crosses the Atlantic goes to London, and nearly all who go there write something about it. I have endeavored in these letters to omit the usual stereotyped descriptions of buildings and places which every school boy knows well enough to recite. In nccordance with this principle, then, 1 shall not weary you with a pen picture of the Tower or Westminster or St. Paul’s, To be sur2 we went to all these places, and our visits there were wonderfully satisfactory,except at Westminster which we only saw from the outside. No one was admitted to the interior during vur stay in London, as the decorations which had been put in for the queen’s jubilee were being taken down. We mussed sceing a session of the honse of commons too, all on acccunt of the trouble- some Irish question. Mr. Ed. A. Perry, London correspondent to the Boston Herald, very kindly offered to get us passes, but the evictions called him away to Ircland and we were left. It is not so to get into the houses of parliament as into the capitol at Washington. Since the dynamite outrage here no one has admitted fo the houses without ial permission from a member. e stayed in London two wecks, dur- which time we visited all the various museums, palaces, public buildings, parks, etc., whicn I shall not attempt to describe. An afternoon in Hyde park afforded us a view of London high " life which 1 shall never forget. It must be remembered that the social season in London does not close until about July 81, when parhament adjourns. Our vsiit there then was just at the close of the season and ~ the vicinity of Piceadilly, St. James et and park corner was lively with superb carriages driving to and from the club houses and private residences, Americans who have notbecnin London have little iden of the splendor of a swell London equippage. 1 shallnot call them beautiful;—guudy is & better word, and riddy sounds better still. Stockinged ootmen with satin kull breeches and long frocks to mateh were not uncom- mon, while cocked hats, white gloves and powdered wigs usually completed the gay costumes of the two Dromios on the box, Hyde park presented a lively spectacle on pleasant afternoons at four or fiye o'clock, when huge red wheeled carriages rolled around behind well bred steeds in gold trimmed harness and close vh}med mane, The palatial club houses of Pall Mall « were a great attraction, lly White's club m St. James whose bow window has been made fam- ous by so many novelists 4 We were also much interested in the priceless treasures of the British museum whnere we wandered about for a day and o half and then went away sorry not to have seen everything. The cream of the collection in° my mind was con- tained in the KIgin room where are to e seen the remains of sculptures by Phidias made to adorn the Parthenon at Athens. 'They are known as the Elgin marbles, having been brought from Athens by Lord Elgin, ana are consid- ered by many to be the finest sculptures in existence.” A Greek scholar had but to be reminded of the Acropolis at Athens to call to mind all its ancient architectural glory. He can conceive of the untold value of the Elgin collection when he knows that it comprises the frieze and two pediments of the Parthe- non. Among the many thousand important manuscripts in the museum, those which interested me most were the original manuseripts of “Gray's Elegy,” parts of Scott's “‘Kenilworth,” and papers and letters written by all the old English masters, such as_ Ben Jonson, Pope, Swift, Milton and Macaula; As the wonders of London are not even to be cnumerated in so shorta letter as this, I'shall not hesitate to leave the city to your imagination and good judgment., ~ But first let me say a word about American and English iuslnons. It first dawned Jupon me in London that the American public allows itself to be imposed upon by tradesmen who pre- tend to keep up with Enghsh styles. On getting into London we learned that all sorts of wearing apparel, hats, boots, shirts, cravats, and even suits, repr sented in New York as *‘latest knglish,” were not English at all, The wide creased trousers which were so unive sally worn in N York were scar ever seen on Pic !y, while no one who made any pretention to style was ever seen in a brown or grey derby. ‘Tall, sleek ‘chimney pots” seemed” to have dropped down on the heads of all. The top of an omnibus looked like the top of a square towed with the numerous silk hats as turret The day of tiles has surely e in to London. Every- body wears them,’even young boys of fourteen; while the self-respecting Ameri- can slinks away into a corner on the evening of his first day in town, and squandeas twenty-five shillings (cheap by the way) on a new silk hat. I might add that many customs which have been introduced in America as lish, do not come from respectabl lishmen, but are opred the ways of street roughs of the low- est class, All this, how is not a question of great import o. What matters if the Anglo-maniac of our country isn’t exactly up to the mark? The ways of the two countries are differ- ent, and will be so as long as the east is divided from the west. Before leaving the metropolis 1 must not fail to mention what has now become a London institution, the American exhi- bition. It has got to be quite the proper thing to go to the exhibition now, since Buffalo Bill and the rest of the show have been recognized by royalty. On entering the main building one is re- minded very much of the centennial ex- hibition of 1876, and although the Ameri- can exhibition does not compare with the centennial in diminsions, it amply fultills its purpose and well deserves a visit from American wares are i process of man- | ufacture by Yankee machinery,-and the busy hum of wheels and spindles serve well to illustrate the ingenuity and in dustrial advancement of our people. As 1 walked about amongst this scene of life aud activity, such as I hed not before witnessed in all London, a patriotic thrill erept through wy veins and I felt doubly proud of being an Amer . The exhi- bition is on a much lar, geale than 1 expected to find it; in fact I had almost forgotten its existence. The various departments, and manufacture,but also of the arts and are surprisingly complete, and for an inststution carried on by vrivate enterprise and _capital, the exhibition is remarkably satisfactory. Very near by and in close connéction | not only of trade | with the exhibition, is Buffalo Bill's shed, that show which has met with wonderful success in London, and be said to have achieved world-wide renown. In- deed it seems & wonder to me that the aristocracy of London counld figd any- thing so pre-eminently captivating about a few dirty Ingians and bucking bron- ch But the cowboys und their antics took well, and for the sake of Buffalo Bill and any other westerners who are d, am glad of it. Among various other curiosities from the wild and wooley west, was one_tent labelled **Nebraska ~cowbays. 1t is needless to say that [ made my way through the crowd and surprised every- body by jumping over the ropes into llyla tent. "1 was not pounced upon and im- mediately devoured as the erowd appar- ently expected, but after giving my card and announcing that [ was %rum Ne- braska, | was received with open arms. No prodigal son ever bad a more aftec- tionate reception, and in half an hour had taken a conversational round-trip over every cow-path from Omaha te the Black Hills, My long-haired and high-booted brethren proved to bea very intelligent and polite set of fellows, which 18 much more than could be said of many of the “h’-less cockneys who were gazing at them over the ropes. London’s musical and theatrical attrac- tions are thoroughly first-class, and are such as one would expeet to find in the largest and wealthiest city in the world, Henry Irving and Miss ‘Terry in “Faust” draw immense crowds every night, They will make a tour of America next season. At the top of all London amusements stand the verformances of the Italian opera in Covent Garden and Drury Lane. These have long been among the fore- most of European opera houses and for musical and spectacular grandeur, their performances are most excellent. ' [t was a satisfaction to me, however, 1o sce that their presentations were but very little superior to those of the Americin Na- tional Opera company, which fact is to wondered at since the latter company is supported by private subscriptions, while the Royal Italian operas are subsidized by the crown, ¥ SEPEL, ——~— CONNUBIALITIES. George Arthur, press azent for Charles L. Davis, was warried to Lena Schaeffer last Tuesday. R. C. Chamberlin and Abby M. H. Willay, of Ida Van Cortland’s company, were re- cently married at Mt. Morris. Mich, Louls Dalton, profession known as Leo Morris. was la(vf)' married St. Louis to Mrs. Wischman, of the variety stage. Miss Belle Williams was married at the head ot her mother's coffin to H. S. Fitch in Elmira, N. ‘The dying mother had so en- joined. The bride was in black. A Jacksonville, Fla., man of twenty-four married a rich widow of seventy-tive. He had gotten a elimpse ot her bank account. ‘The case was one of love at first sight. LAwn an., August -A marriage license nted to-day to Louis Tood, and Mrs. Harriet Shall, ‘I'he parties reside near Johnson, an Arizona stockman, sie Felaton, and gave her in three £12,000 worth of jewelry and dressesand $4,000 for pin mouey, iminediately thereafter she eloped with an eastern drummer, At Hagerstown, Md., Wednesday, a couplo are reported to have been married in one min- ute’s time. ‘They arrived on the S:15 train, and were united by a elergyman in’ waiting, who left on the 5:16 train to continue a trip he was making, Bayard Taylor's daughter, Bayard Taylor,was married Germany, August 12, to Otto medical student at the Unive Killiani will eepin| Halle, Benjamin F. Butle Miss Lillian edrichre . Killiani, of Halle, 1 Mrs. at ouce begin is the lutest public | man to send an offering to the Kast Aurora (N, Y.) fair. He has forwarded a dozen sil Ver spoons to the committee, to be presented o the young woman who enters the bonds of W imony on the opening day of the faig,