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t THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. 1887.—~TWELVE PAGES. et Tt e L st eeny sgewn ot oot | FOUND AND LOST A FORTUNE in Florence, Italy, by Mr. A. Schuyler Croubybwho was ‘heyn United States &,‘.’.. face was conuunt‘lfil wreathed in smiles first wife of Mr. Pike was the daughter of ex-Mayor S8avage by his first wife. The second wife of = Mr. Savage was s left school last week upon finding that | In the autumn of 1888. ‘The prosident m?\io blacks had put in an a) p::-nnee. ‘It is | cabinet, divlomatic eorps, ‘Frei [ posed in some towns to keep colored | clety of Cincinnati, Grand Army of the INCIDENTS OF MATRINONY, Proj sul at that place, says the Indianapolis [ the sister of Mr. Pike, The | which seemed to fill the my oourt- schools open by calling them branch schools. | public, and Leglon of Honor are to be s g . 5 vited. committee consisting of M K An Every-Day Btory—Wedded at the | Journal. One day he was conducting a [ son married _ last week was [ room. She was happy, bashully, | Tongh Struggle of the Discovorer of the | felmmnsne mocmy oo o orton Sinith, Warner Milorc 3. A; Maevin i Oonaty Fair, party of Americans through the principal | born of the second marriage, and became | surreptitiously happy—and she looke New York Oil Fields. university iy Sy open & graduntes | Wemple, 8. 8. Cox, and George W. Cui places of interest in the city, and among | the husband of the daughter of Mr. Pike | bashfully from behind her stalwart lover's ow York Oil Fields, (A. B. and B, 8.) of all approved American | WAS Appointed to furthier the request of Vo ) the places visited was the insane asylum. | by his first marriage. Thus ex-Mayor | arm, They wanted to be married. The —_ colleges. 'This is in further development of | 000 from congre: THE ROTHSCHILD WEDDING. Savage was Mr. Pike's brother-in- law; divorce suit was suspended at once, for ex-Mayor SI'lq s daughter, by marry- 00! Y the court will stop unmaking marriages | O+ P. TAYLOR'S RISE AND FALL. to mnke‘one n"i an; l:lme. The ceren‘;nny — was performed. The young man drew out np&! bill and placed u‘ bofore the | HOW the Plucky Old Man Pashed For- judge. With the brightest smile and a ward Over Obstacles and Died speech as gallant as a Chesterfield could atthe First Dawn of make he presented it to the bride. The 8 little lady accepted the money, and with ucces ?hmgck' gtrsfeful n}nvem(;‘nz bnhe dre:iv e boques of toses from _her bosom &n “I see Professor Orton o8 with laced it before the judge. With a bow s agr fle racoived the rosei‘mds. and s fow moe Doc Smith that ncither oil nor gas will ments later he returned’ to the divorce [ be found near Omaha,” remarked a suit, but the sweet odor pervaded the | rather seedy looking individual who was dingy court-room all that day. ;hmding at the corner of Fifteenth and TR Farnam strects yesterday. *‘Well, I don't gl believe a elie’ word that these professional The devil will play his last card on judg- | geologists say. I'm an old driller my- ment day, but Gabriel will trumpet. self and I ¢ ’ A man may scoft at religion and laugh at | & p ) learned my trade’ under old the pleadings of a revivalist, but it takes but . b, Taylor. a very slight cold to bring him to his sneeze. “Who is O. P. Taylor? Didn't youever the university scheme recently adopted by Walt Whitman's bust has been taken the trustees, Sidney I&. Morse, of Boston, and his The Home Journal of September 7 con- | length portrait by young Herbert H. Gilehrist, tained & vory useful feature, a “School | of London. Thou Eakins proposes to Guide,” glving the “points” of many leading | paint him also, and it has long been the in- schools in New York and elsewhere. Lt tells | tention of Augustus St. Gaudens to model of the different branches taught, the names | his likeness, “So that, in addition to the en~ of principals in every case, the terms, loca- | €ravings and photographs with which the tion—in fact, all particulars and information | ‘'&ood eay p a8 been caroful to add which & parent or guardian would desire to | his publ®fied works, there will be a_host lmue'dv. he guide seems to hn‘!vn b'e(‘n pra- | likenesses of him as he appears in old age. ced with exceeding care, and, 8o far as we — e ! SINGULARITIES. :r“\;?“‘ 10 judge, is thoroughly impartial and i ul ul. b " Miss Lucy Salmon, the new protessor of | Florida spiders are saia to capture laree | history at Vasear colloze, I3 a womn with a | DUMDErs of snakes In their webs. f future, Her book, “The Appointing Power | One of the rare productions of Ja of the President,’” is the clearest monograph | county, Mich., I8 a white rattlesnai 2 mfl has appeared on that difticult sul IML belongs to Richard Crouch,and is quite tame. 88 on is & graduate of Michizan M mes rerguson, of Chester county, university and a feilow of Bryn Mawr col- | Pa., couldn’t imagine what was stealing her lege. 1t (s curlous, by the way, that seven of f'oun( chickens until she happenea to see wil As the party was going through the wards one of the inmates of _the fnstita tion suddenly called outto Mr. Crosby: *'Oh, sir, you are an American, are you nott For God's sake come here and lis- ten to mi story.” Mr. Crosby went to the cell from whence the piteous appeal came, and saw before the bars a woman much emaciated but apparently sane. He listened to her story, and, after mak- ing inquiries, set himself to work to pro- cure her release, in which he succeeded after a great deal of trouble. The woman's story was as follows: She was born Mobile, Ala., of wealthy parents, and being attractive in appearance she had a number of suitors for her hand in marriage. One day an Italian came to the city. He was hand- some and wrote the prefix count before his name. He soon got himself intro- duced into the best circles of Moblie so- ciety, ana by his pleasing and courte- ous bearing became a great favorite ing Mr. Pike ame sister-in-law to her own father; oung Joseph Snvn{e. being the son of Mr. Pike's sister, 18 his nephew; being the half-brother of Mr. Pike's first wife, he is also his brother-in- law, and by his marriage last week to Mr. Pike's daughter, became his son-in- law. Thus Mr. Piks is uncle and brother- to his son-in-law; and the recent bride Mrs. Joseph W. Savage, is cousin and niece to her husband, and consequently her own aunt. Weddings in Old Trinity, New York Sun: Assistant Sexton Pat. terson was sitting comfortably tilted backward upon two legs of a stool, the other morning, just inside the south door of Trinity church. ‘“Speaking of wed- dings.” he saia, ‘‘we get lots of them here, People like to get married in old Trinity_you know. KEverybody that Married and Imprisoned—An Actress’ Wedding — Love Triumphant— Bashful Bridegrooms — Scenes at O1d Trinity, An Everyday Story. George Weatherly, Life was so humdrum 'neath villago trees, And a lassie was en¥ and hard to please, So he'l::'lf the gold fever and went o’er the Faraway then hesailed, to a lane that seemed alr, Aund the whole of his fortune he bore with hini there, A palr of strong arms and a stress of brown alr. ‘Toll was all vanity, lite hard and stern, And he thought of the farm, and the silvery the ten fellowships opened to competition in & frog from & pond near the barn that women's collexe are held by graduates of | catch aclia © and jump into the water the co-educational school. Miss Salmon (8 a | it. fine-looking blonde, with a clear, open face, The left leg of toward William: hysically and mentally healthy and stead- | tarmer of Mfim.g Sterling, Ky.‘.bn.“fi o urn, i She—Nreddie, how often have 1 told you | hear of him? Why, h th h And the lassle he loved, and hq among the Iadies of this place. He be- | speaks English has heard of the church, » } w | D€ ! hy, be was the man Who | faqt Jooking. 5 turn, b 8 longed to re- i;yne a constant ;mm at the house of | and folks Rl;e to tell their neighbors they ‘.‘.“u‘_‘"\"e’i’?’fi{‘"...?.?.2‘.{.,?“'{{,‘1',".,“:‘ ;‘fi';“',‘gs' discovered the New Yurk' oil lleh'lu. and ‘K. —0——"‘0 !.‘:.’.‘?.‘.\'.lm llll:|‘s“fio’;. lrik: nl") I:\I).llklun: prece | n a sweet English village, one glad sum- MERRY bt t0 b a0 lot I Tha ;;‘4‘::1 Tn?{"”gz h',%hl){e gvrvt::ny m!-,\lv‘:ls; {g:y b oot D LA L ELES Uil bt o bl P oanap rC TS, HA intimac; be%nn to ripen into love on the part of the girl. Her parents did not approve of the match, but the handsome 1talian por- trayed in glowing terms the wealth of his affection for her and the beauties of the lovely Florentine home which he wished her to become the mistress of. At last his entreaties were successtul, and the young girl was marricd to the “count” secretly. When the girl's parents heard of it they were enraged. Her father refused to have anything to do with her, and, in- stead of giving her the fortune he had intended to be hers, settled on her a sum of $2,000a year. The young couple started for Europe, but it soon became apparent to the wife that her husband was not only not in love with her, but that his only object in marrying her was to procure her fortune, ‘and having failed in that through the anger of her father, he had no more use for her. Shortly after reaching Florence the count had three physicians called in and they made an examination of the young girl, much to her surprise and terror. On the following day a covered wagon came to the door and she was told to get mside. She tainted, and when she re- covered she found herself in an insane asylum. There she remained for over two years, until she was found by Mr. Crosby. Meanwmile the husband, who had caused her incarceration, wrote bome to thudzirl'u parents that she was very sick and described the expense he was putting himself to in order to take proper care of the girl he loved so well. The father was too proud to allow him to bear the full expense of his daughter’s exvense under the circumstances, and the annual remittances continued to come along. The count puid $500 to the keeper of his wife,and lived in good style on the remaining #$1,500. As soon as the news reached Mobile of the true state of affairs, however, the remittances sud- penly stopped and the young girl was received home with open arms. The count 18 still living in Florence, but he has to resort to other means of earning a living. i Ii'«»"l. ‘.\‘lr. r.l;her fiomml!l-i«:lsusldc'bec:n_ulw any science, excepting such as he had e falled to take a degree of doctor of Philo- | himself. He ran a cigar factory in sobhy. His phil devel L . 9 be :“,"“‘;t de)::a‘;-l ogopliy Was niot developed 1o | vy)icvitle, N. Y., for a good many years, A {"."”{ lll|l Croi:a..‘{e?., Irlnl;:lhannm:\.mcel- and had saved considerable stuff. Well, ment that the pastor of the Congregational | when the excitement over the big wells ffl;‘}mxxwf};flfi?fl'vlflf":“.v.; month under 31‘1 the Bradford field began to die out, old “Little boy,” said a country minister, who | Taylor got it into his head that the coun- was on hls{wi;yrto chlllscll, "mm d«l) ytm l!‘“%- try needed more oil and that he was the pose your fatber would say if he should fin S Dot ivare fishbng on the ‘Sabbatn dayer “ils | Man to discover it. So he started out to would ask me wot luck I was havin',” look for a location and to lease lands. MA| coulryu‘clerg‘ine& ns"bom ing of | Pretty soon he struck a site that suited ving been educated at two collezes, *‘You i remind me,” sald an aged divine, *‘of an in- h'_m' m‘n‘l he want to ?vork L] stance Lknow of a calf that'sucked two | every bit of land for miles around. He cows.” “What was the consequence?”’ asked | didn't take any partners, but went it a third person. “Why, sir,” replied the old | alone, and when he had got all the land gentleman very gravely, “the consequence | that there was to be had he started to was tiiat he was a very great calf " drill his first well. He called it Triangle Captain Leroy, late leader of the salvation | No. 1, for he had an ides that if the first army in St Paul, well-known 8s “Happy | well didn't striki 4 third d, b Harry,” anda vigorous exhorter ‘and taui- | T, § AU LG L) bourine piayer, has given up evangelizing, | Would operate in triangles until he struck and now is a waiter iu a_variety theatre in | the oil belt, which he was dead sure ran Chicago. He serves beer with great skill.and [ somewhere in that neighborhood. and savs that there’s more money in that “Well, down went Triangle No. 1, and work than trying to convert folks. there were good indications that it was “Now, children,” said_the Sunday school | in the right spot. But when the well was teacher, who had bean impressing upon the [ down to about the right depth, along mimjshnr m;r l‘!:n"s m.e u-rrt:rs of tul\nm came some Standard Oil fellows and vunishment, “if any ot vou have anything | ‘fixed' the drille S on your minds, any’ trouble that you would (,':;\:)",l:',"'l',‘“,',l,"fi"“1:1:’0,‘),',‘,?',]"" LI 11ko to ask me about, [ will gladly tell you all | G OICHE 1 A wklough there was ofl, Lean,” “There was no response for some | they plugzed up the hole so it only time." At length a little fellow on tbe other [ Showed up for ‘two or three barrels. end of the bench raised his hand and said: | Then he started in on Triangle No. 2, ‘*Teacher I've got a question.” *“Well, what | and had the same game played on him. is it?”” “'Kf you wasme, an’ had a stubbed | Triangle No. 3 eame out just the same. toe, would yotieitupina rag with arniker “By this time Taylor’s tobacco busi- onto it or would Y""_J““ 1t go? ness had gone to the dogs and most all = -I SRE L kis money was in holes in the ground. MODES FOR MEN. But he wasn't discouraged. He started Shaving mugs and complete toilat sets of | another well, mortgnging his business oxidized silver are very much in vogue and | and disposing of all the real estate he not easily tarnished. had. ‘I'nat well eame in_just like the The covert coat will be worn more or less, | others. Then he pawned his wife's jew- They will be made of cloth a shade or two | elry and began to bore once more. low darker than last season’s. he did cuss every time a well came in An attractive pin for a gentleman’s scarf | dry! He was the very worst cusser I Is a8 miniature sword, perfect in all its de- | ever knew, and the air was bluer than a talls, with a handsnmely jeweled hilt. whetstone when ho would open up on his Umbrella handles arc of silver deeply i o grained with acli, and roprosent. In reor | wory'e praniyrd Oil company and the :‘:,';ml:,'fflufl';“n%fl;‘fhég;‘,mfk“"“" They are “Finally he ran out of funds and For morning suits vests will be cut a trifle | Ouldn’t Taise another dollar. Every- higher, with Siop roll’ and a fow without cols | body called him a crazy crank, afool and lars, The sack coats will be cut straight | evervthing else they could think of. But front and have four buttons, the old man kept on, plugging away by The cutaway coat will be made of black or | himself. He couldn’t hire any drillers, blue-gray diaxonal, and will have three but- | for he couldn’t pay. The world seemed tons. I'he edge be flat-braided. ‘The | dead set against him, and he couldn't vest will be of same material, and the | find a friend who would speak a kind trousers ot striped or check plald. word for kim. His long, curly hair began Frock coats will be made of soft, fine > o had a dejec! = diazonals oF perhaps of easy baskets. 'Tnay | ', €% BFay, and he I ‘fi“"”‘““d' orn will be siik faced and flat braided, and will g“]'d’“"tk His everlasting grit, though, have four buttons. They will be madea | N€l¢Out. % f trifle lonzer than last season, possibly two Finally he wandered to the littie town inches, but no more. of Richburg, away off the railroad, sur- G o from it tomhioterred creditor is one who never asks | “yiey” Mabal Trupp, of Ovid, N. Y, was Wanted—A fool who will fn through the much surprised the other day, as she was g b Niagara whirlpool and not live to tell the v’vrg::'?rzfll‘n'o‘o'l"lnha:?;\‘::»:l‘;dm:hvu?yll tale. serpent six inches lol 1t woman_wants 8o kiow what sncrliices | Fomiaized stew aliting- necdly oS ;':‘::km:c':rl.k' her lether take & seat in the A horse grazing on the bank of (i o Ol wish I was & FM‘"M' mamma.” lake, Micli., saw Mrs. Charles H. Pettit " b ) her little daughter drowning, jumpod inte Why?' “Cause I could have 1ots of sugar | (I Juite swain out to them. Fhi! em un: put into me.” derstand they wero to 'take’ is. mane, and ‘We have notlced that the man who has his | then carried them safely to the .homo‘ g nose on the grindstone generally getshis wits |~y q 1argast carp on record was caught o sharpened. of Little river,on Hon. John Q Xdllll Kentucky has become 8o lawless that it 18 | place, (ieorgia, Ia: ay. It was caught by now no longer safe for aquiet citizen to steal | a negro with a hook and line, weighed fifteen a watermelon. I»ouuds and measured thirty-one inches in ‘There is nothing consolatory for the pa- | length. Some of the scaled were the size of & tient suffering from a severe cold in the head Iver half dollar. to be told that “colds attack the weakest The wife of a Nevads, Mo., man had tes spot.*”’” young chickens. l»nuncfll down upon themand carried on will pat their children's children on the head and say, ‘Your grandpa and I were married in Trinity ohurch.) And then it's really the finest place in the world to get married in, anyhow. Its so solemn and still here, every surround- ing is so beautiful, the very airis awe- some, the light comes through the win- dows softened and tinted, and the organ sounds so wonderful, interrupting the softened noises from the street. 1 don't wonder they like it. “‘We have two or threc weddings a day here sometimes. Then again, we have but two or three a week, and some weeks we don’t have any.{ “‘All kinds of people get married here. Some come from way off on purpose for 1t. We had a couple from Philadelphin yesterday and not long ago an Knglish ady that was here visiting got married, She said she'd stay single but what she'd be married n Trinity, Her sister was married here, and she would be, too. A southern congressman dropped in here once, and was married off-hand, just as if it was nothing to him. They nunnrullY make arrangements before hand with ths head sexton. “What do they give the minister? Oh, il() for the minister and sexton together. ‘hat's the regular fee, but sometimes they give a great deal more. Dr. Dix marries folks sometimes bere, but not the stray couples that I've been talking about, No one hears of half the weddings in this church.” mer day, A fond mother’s heart is singing aw: And a dear littlelassie no lnnxe:uyl 'Nay.” ‘Wedded at the Fair, Cmclro Herald: The third day of the annual fair and exposition of the V"luon- sin Industrial association at Racine at- tracted the largest attendance seen at the fair grounds this year. The sensa- tional feature of the day wasthe mar- ringe of Jabez Beresford and Mary Augusta Weeb, who were wedded at thie fair grounds. The nssociation offered a $60 set of furniture to any couple con- senting to be married at the fair, and Boresford and _his bethrothed realized their opportunity to achieve fame and a furniture set, at the same time avoiding the customary fee to the parson. The marringe took place in front of the rand stand at 11 o’clock in the morn- ng. A platform was erected, decorated with evergreens and surmounted by a gilded yoke, from which depended two nooses of evergreens. The improvised sanctuary looked like a fancy gallows. Great crowds had gathered around the grand stand in anticipation of the event. Shortly before 11 a brass band began to play dolorous music of a funeral-march style, and word was passed that the coup‘e was en route. The crowd in- creased till nearly everybody on the grounds was in the viciniey of the grand stand, !ryiug to get a view of the happy pair. The band relented and changed the tune to a lively airas Jabez and Augusta drove up 1n an open carriage. They were greeted with cheers, and with great self-possession passed in front of the grand stand to the platform, Jabez helped his bride up the steps, and both struck attitudes under the yoke. Miss Webb is a nice-looking young woman, about twenty years old. ‘Sheis a blonde, and has o pleasant face and a neat fig- ure. She was quite prettily dressed in Burpln velvet and white silk, surmounted y & heliotrope bonnet. She comes from Antioch, [ll. Beresford is a farmer of Hickory, Lake county, Ill. He has a lmod-humorml face, and is prepossessin, n appearance. His costume consist mainly of white kid gloves. The cere- mony was performed by Justice Heyers of Racine, who has only one arm, but he tied the knot as well and quickly as if he had half a dozen. Jabez punctured the final sentence with a kiss on his bride’s cheek—a kiss that could be heard all over the grounds., The osculation was the signal for a burst of applause and loud cheers, amid which and the con- gratulations of many _ well wishers Mr. and Mrs. Beresfora™ fumped into their ‘The elerk, who was nearly worn out show- ing the young lady lavender gloves, was | but did not go far before a lotof crows paralyed by the question: "Now‘ which pair | after him. The next night at roosting time do you think is the lavenderest?” the lost chicken came howe. It stlll bears the A Missourl justice of the peace who was | marks of the hawk, but 13 otherwise all i burned out returned his law library ns “‘com- | Fight. d [ prising a bible, a spelling book, a° war his- 0. Briggs, of Prairie du Chine, found fa tory and one volume of Mr. Blackstone.” his yard an egg which consists of two Mr. Lincoln says the white house isa | fectly formed oggs having a soft shell. “gilded prison.” That may be; still there small ends of the mlis are connected by a are several persons in and out of the country | tube half an llu';l in length and three-eighthe Who aro willing o be sent up for four years, | In diameter. One of the oxgs contained It tho embassy now in_Philadelphia want | 1fthin but the white, while the other was a design for paper currency, the wash tickets R, o from sty Chiness jaundry 'would furnisha | Town Clerk Whittier, of Salem, IIL., hag & ood basis. No attempts at counterfeiting | YOng Leghorn rooster that has a fine ear for these has yet been known. music. When Miss Whittier seats herselt Therois always a terrible far-reaching | 8¢ the piano to play he hurries into the room unctuality and dire impetuosity abouta | Hroueh the door or window, files upon, the riend whom we owe two dollars and & half: \ ¢,-0 ghort e, hops upon them and poun; fl':’{;&m;’:'fi&;:fi;d‘fa:“ bard to tind | &0 FOHES that seein o 1 Rl with dellght. A lawyer gives as a reason for not going abroad this summer that a rich client of his has just died, and he is afraid the heirs will First KForeign Wedding in Corea. The Corean correspondent of the Japan Mail writes as follows from Seoul on the 8th of July: The first foreign wedding iu Seoul took place July 5, 1887. The parties forming the union were the Rev. D. A. Bunker, one of the teachers in the royal Corean college, established a year ago, and Miss Annie Ellers, physician to her majesty the queen. All the foreign residents of the capital were present,and some of the native officials, 'Che pre- sents to the bride were many and various, the richly and beautifully embroidered screens sent by the queen attracting a great deal of attention. Prince Min Yong Ik, who a year ago left for China in such great hasto, re- turned a short time ago with a few more ideas of reform. One of these is to dress the soldiers according to foreign style, and to do away with the rank of kulso. The kulso is a soldier one grade above the ordinary rank, and attached as a special guard of honor to native officials and foreign legations. There are 3,000 of these in the country, and the idea is to make them serviceable to the govern- Dr. John Vansant, of the United States Marine hospital at 8t. Lows, claims to be the n‘m'r t;vl have '({lkltln cnelz;):ofllilp \sl_hy fltho l‘lxht of fireflies. He placed twelve fireflies In & zet the property unless he stays at home and | threa-ounce bottle, covering its mouth with 0oks sharply after his own Interesta, fine white bobinel. ‘Tho averageduration of During a_recent heavy rain the stato of | the flash of each insect was half a second,and Rhode [sland was washed over into Connec- | the luminous area on the abdomen was about ticut, but the governor hired a couple of Ital- | ane-eighth of an inch square. ‘The time of ian laborers for half a day and the state has | exposure was lifty flashes. been shoyeled back to the old site. K henomenal dog has been enjoying his. Just think of it! Cider, dougzhnuts, | vacation at Oneida Lake,N. Y.. this summer. rambo apoles, euchre or seven-up, and a rip- | The animal scems to have an abnormal appe: roaring fire, and sitting alongside your best | tite for fish, and whenever he wants any he rirl] The good old winter nights aré coming, | is1n the habit of cawching them himself. 8 oys, when a slice ot below zero is wortha | walks out into the lake, and, after watchin, cycle of July. the water for some time. he makes a qu e plunge and catches a small-sized fish in his THE FIRST TIME, his he devours, and repeats the op- mouth, eration till his appetite is satisfied, —_— The first royal letter was written by Henry mn v1 tothe bishop of Durham, February 10, ALW AYS l‘hLL the TRUVI\H 418, ‘The model of the first English steam vessel was lald before the board of admirality in About where to buy it i st aivn b e | BOOTS and SHOES year 1647, For Ladios, Men and Children, Marriage of Actresses. Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat: One of the most celebrated marriages of an actress in the United States was that of Julia Dean. Sho was, about thirty years ago, what Mary Anderson is to-day—the most popular of all women on the stage. She married Dr. Paul Hayne, of South Carolina. He was a son of Senator Hayne, whose great debates with Web- ster are renowned. But he was poor,and the stage career of his wife was not in- carriage aud were driven away. The set | torrupted by marringe. They did not | ment, rather than to individuals, in case S ded by the big hills of Allezany | The first house ever numbered in London | JDUT this aside for future referenco when Ia B N ) 3 I 3 st popular overcoat will be the | rounded by the big hills o egany ig" 0 k ST of furniture was sent after them, and [ Jive huppily together. She made a Cal- | ot necessity. singlo-breasted fly front. They will be made | county, and there he talked some farmers | Was one abutting east of Northumberland dics’s gonts' and childrens’ shoes you want Jabez and Mary Augusta have the satis. uy faction of knowing their wedding was to huy. house, Strand. AVE tho kindness to calland inspect my i i il 3 isfactor: ifornia tour with the most satisfactory ‘The first lord mayor’s show was in 1453 and I sclectod stock, you'll find my prices are results, In 1866 she was divorced,and in of beavers, wide, wove diagonals and ker- | into believing that there was oil under A Mayor Who Married Himselfl. sevs. ‘The width 'of shoulders has been in- | their lands. He put in his experience, more lurgely attended than any ever i 3 y Galignani's Messenger: The tribunal | creased, as in all coats. ‘They are made up oy i ;. Sir John Shaw was the tirst that held a feast not high. colobratod n- Wisconsin Beresford | Siod ithe aier ot Now York " Hayne Jy | of Sariat, Dordogne, has just annulled | oft, however, with no waddini. they put In the money, and down went | {n'the Guildnall, i60L. T, e ¥ana chidrens’ fino ehocs 1 carry told the Herald reporter that he saw the | in San Francisco, practicing medicine, | the marringe of the mayor of small com- | = The hanales of walking sticks this fall will | Taylor had learned & fow things, and | , The first book containing musical charac- A A LKL COR A nssociation’s advertisement ina paper, | Mrs, John Hoey, known as Mrs, Russell, | mune in that district. A few weeks ago | be V"rvn:"""i}‘l l'|:mrer1 ""l'“ “I""“ of ‘Il"l“* when the hole began to get down in the fif:;::“w:ffl'.'\';;l wkel;“&"r\',’:,'r“f:fi press of the ADIES, you oan send me, or 10ave your or and thought it a good plan to make that | of forty years ago, was, berore Muss | the official referred to gave notice of his f:m’znd:slzr'u o .u“anl‘lllir;‘: :n:fl?{:is pobe | neighborhood of third sand he never left £ 3 ders whether they are small or large. muck furniture easily, and as Mary was intention to marry bis sister-in-law, a willing, they volunteered. pretty brunette of twenty summers, and it was understood that the deputy mayor ‘I'he first advertisaments known of in Eng- 4 i GUARANTEE you courteous attendance and and wers in the shape of emall uilla afixed | J GiATANIReIRNSTERNR Siivhe Kingdon's marriage with Gould, perhaps a heavily silvered, the stick being of malaces the derrick. Every time the sand-pum the wealthiest lady who ever married i 8 malacca, ‘F and of lighter weight than heretofore. came up he was there to see what it had. The Rothschild Wedding. from the stage. She married John Hoey, B The Enelish Derby Grosvenor is the most | He used to make the drillers shut down The first record of a judge’s salary gives AYING strict! hto thy fact Paris. Cotrespondente: Thers” have | now the. Priacipal man of the Adams’ would proside av the ceremony. On ar- | yopafar hat for fail. Lt has & brim of 13 | nights, and he would screw on a capover | £is Tas. 4a. as the st By 1760 | PATond st tns ocse aimonnte T aa i been a number of fashionable marriages | express company, the owner of Long {,"_‘.;d‘:_;r’:mm‘fim'z‘x‘:om"“m"fi‘ bm“u the | inches. and is 5 iuches high, with a heavy | the hole and sleep with his head on it, | ton, judye of the king's beuch, 1,4%6. doing 80, by doin IA(’INQ to my customers these discounts, The first 1talian lady who sang in public in ! England hwns ancas‘u M|nrgl|}-lflu w‘iu :,.L":,m :‘T:':‘ m‘“:‘ :“'m“: """“ i oit {8 re of your patronage, llfllég,lne‘ who appeared in various operas in in fine & oh T liave gow o ‘The first play bills issued from Druary J OT only all the loading grades, but the finest Lane theatre was on April 8, 1063, the plece | 1N stylos in summer aad fail goods that cASh represented being ‘“Ihe Humorous Lieuten- can command. At IVE that excelent hand and machine make Carriages were first introduced into Eng- gonteslios ULIL Yo uOE & 00/ oR BONEE land in 1330, and were for a lonk time used (QUEELIOR North Star Toot and Shoe Coy only for the conveyance of the sick aud of | S Minnewpolis, Minn., 1 have every grads ap Aispiny. ‘The first toll for the repair of English high- IIAVIRJ(I hut strictly one price, and that the ways was imposed in the reign of Edward lowost, the boots and shoes you buy of me. IIL, and was for rn{mlrlnz the road between ON all occasions are just as represented, per- 8t Giles and Temple Bar. feot in fit, grade and quality. in the course of the week, and among the number was one which dragged so long that every one said it was “‘high time when it was announced. [ mean the wedding of Mlle. Helene de Roth- schild and the Belgian cavalry officer. He is rich in names, but until she be- came his wife heicould not boast of being rich in worldly gear. The style and titlos of the great heiress in question are Baron Stephen van Nyevelt, vun Haar, van Zuylen, He 1s quite genuine. Belgians are gznenll_y what they look andset up to be. His wealthy bride worships him, and I dare say she will Branch and the possessor of great wealth in New York. Love Triumphant. Louisville Courier-Journal: Thomas Lewis ana Miss Ida Maupin, residing near Magnolia, 1n Larue county, eloped to Jeffersonville yesterday morning and were married by Justice Lee at Strauss’ hotel. For some time the attentions of Lewis to Miss Mauphin have been objec- tionable to her father. Last Monday Mr. Mauphin was called away from home on business to remain until yester- day. Strict orders were given the girl's mother to keep a close watch on her, lm”i 'l‘lmt;llkflhnt;'_lrn l{;’} 1l|ulllemn high as | even though there was snow on the ast seasow’s: the brim, 13¢ inches, has more | ground, He had made up his mind to ol Lt Boglisticlotiicape ace s pitvjin: ::;B no ‘monkey-work,’ and there wasn'’t ‘Trousers of fanéy white and plaid cheviot w0, d in March the drill i will be worn during the season, with coat | , -One day in March the drill got into and vest of black cheviot: coat shaped to the | third sand, and when the pump showed form. ~ Trousers will not be creased, and the | up you ought to have seen . P. dance happy medium in size will bo about twenty | ana’swear. It was better than a circus inch kuee and seyenteen inch bottom. Faney | and the happiest moment of his life. The vests in tigures of entirely ditferent material | news of flfn strike quickly spread, and will be worn with sack coats. when the well was ready to shoot the Notwithstanding the arguments used for | Jittle town was filled with thousands of and against the sack dress coat they are | oi] men. Taylor was fairly crazy, and bound to come into popularity, and the more : i prominent tailors on the avenue have al. | After the torvedo had exploded and ready recoived large orders for them. For | 8hown up a gusher of seventy-five bar- deputy mayor failed to be punctual and the prospectively happy couple had been threatened with™ hostile demonstrations, the mayor thought it would be as well to proceed with his_ own marriage in pro- pria persona. He got rather flurried,and forgot to go through some of the legal formalities. ~ But all's well that ends well. The disunited spouses are to be married in a fow days. Afternoon Weddings. Chicago Tribune: Afternoon weddings are now of far mere frequent occurrence in England than weddings in the fore- remain satisflied with her bargain. Her f n, not only among ultra-fashionable | wear at a stag party nothing could be more | rels he was the hero of the occasion. | The first English almanac was brought out YALY tms you require Ladies!: G roiatives are furious, and. find fauit with | 4 during the, absence of Mr. Mauphin | 300, 10l Oy, ore: bt among sorloty | Gesirable. Tney aro cut atrifio longer than | Everything mean that had been said | atTrinity college, Cambrides, in 1347, and iscaund child’ Shoce, o Fepateing dome her for not having ¢hosen & more intel- RLhar T ravegnl e w‘[’l Iady | in general. The advantages of this | ®lounze coat, are of diagonal, and have a [ about him was taken back, for the crazy a“;"‘:g&'&‘:‘l‘“ngl'_;d"“e:};'fiu'l’,‘ niLons END or call at Philip Lang's Old Relisble lectual husband.” They forget that she ::;': slipped Ml:uy & ,w“’ corfi wx\{ changeare numerous, and convenience, | Tl collar and are faced with corded silk. crank was now a mullionaire and had | 90R @ 4 yoate i Shoe Storo, No. 1320 Farnun stroet. was shut out from most’ things which in- duce a taste for mental superiority. The men who had climbed to eminence by their talents, and whom she was allowed ‘The first striking clock was imported into Every pair of boots or shoes s0ld by Lang #. Europe by the Persians about the vear A. D)., | warranted to fit and to be as represented, or 800, 1t was brought as a present to Charle~ ::‘lmlllm:l":){ w'l,lltl‘wmtlum}g_‘dd E:‘n':‘ll:-m’lt;'fll.llllll J d, and » 5 ) maigne (rom Abdolla king of Tarsis, by two | find: snd o i Laus, i Dress coats will be made of fine diazonals, | made fortunes for land owners through- the diagonal scarccly perceptible, They will | out tho county. gnkaiiriie longers SHALEIRSE eashon, AD! *But O. P. was a millionaire only in will have the shawl collar. 'The dress vest My 2 willbe cut U shaped not quite so much, | eXpectation. After he had proved that economy and sociability may be ranked among them, Under the head of conven- ience may ftirst be mentioned the strain that is now taken off a bridal party as re- mightly attached to the wrist of each. Lewis watched the house every night, but when Friday night dawned no op- portunity had been offered for eloping to see, were all of the fogy age and i ind ards the hour of arrival at the church, | however, as the past season, and will have | he was right about oil in Allegany e BEST §TO0K 14 _OMAHA FOIANE The marriage of the baron so rich in by Miss Mauph i this strain was the more acutely felt, and | made of spotted or embroidered “silk and [ him up. Hard work had rumed his 5 7 Working 8hoos. |a " " 2 RO S veyed by Miss Mauphin by a young 1ady 1 Ly ) t U be x . Starr King, the Unitarian preacher, s to o ing vans” and of the lady so rich in gold | F2¥TG PV plan worked well, and after | the fear of not being in tine wis the up- white. The trousers will made of the | health, and before he had begun to real- | St 0 6T Golden Gate Park, San | Men's Fine Congress or L 200 did not take place with ‘the accompani- | 4} o"sorvices. on one Ppretext or another, | permost thought in the minds of most | 830 material as the coat and will have, lu | 1z his good fortune he was taken with a | Francisco, 9 ment of bell, musio and candle hght, it | My Nauphi il sho was | brides when —comploting their bridal | Shme,¢a4es, 8 stripe of embroldery down the | hemorrhage and died. ‘The whole county | “'grookiyn isto 1 tatue of I o H i y y phin was kept up until she was X g side of the leg. The dress coat will be faced i Brooklyn lsto bave a statue of Henry having been by spocial dispensation sol- | g gjoopy that when she retired she for- | toilets, a stato of perturbation not calen- | with silk turned out to_his funeral and the papers | ward Beecher i the small park at the head 600 emnized—or, rather, got through—in | o,¢'to'take the usual precaution. Shortly | lated fo engender an unrufied demeanor i printed tender obituary notices, but | of Orange street, not far from Plymouth the dingy little sacristy of St. Honore | S0 " ldnight the dash for liberty was | on this important occasion. BRIGHT LITTLE PEOPLE. merciless creditors swaliowed up what | church, 20 d'Eylan.” This was because the bride | 1oq ™0 Phore Lewis was in waiting —_— ? little the old man had left, and the for- The Westchester Nows reports a painting 160 did not renounce Judaism and get bap- | w¢1"s buggy. An uneventful trip o Marriage of the Pope’s Niece. “Johnny,” said the Sunday-school teacher, | tunes made in the New York oil field | in the hands of a Mr. Lower, Flourtown, tized. A priest cannot marry a Jew or lowed to this city by train from the According to the Paris corrcspondgnt swhat is our duty to our neighbors?” *“To | have gone into strangers’ pockets.” Montgomery 'c'numf" which is supposed to be hs, worth elsowhere, 400 Jewess to a christian before an altar, and nearest station. From here they crossed | ©f The Daily News, the pope's third | ask ‘em to tea soon as they get settled,” sald by Jonathan Trumbull, ~1Itis a view of Val- m\mh ‘uud Il‘hlld_;eu s b he —can only join their ~hands | ¢ Vyoqoonviile and were quickly mar- | hiece, Signorina Maria Pecci, is soon to Johnny. ley Forge on & canvas 24x30 inches. I«:dll‘fi;“hr::\?‘n%!h f;,('.,. Lo with maimed rights in the sa- | (O ¥ WA | be married to Count Maroni, a noble [ A Duluth four-vear-old hopeful who was | qyo nao laboratory at Yale.costing 875,000, | (L€ Free Masons of Philadeiphia are busy | ¢ANIE &ioon in Kid oF Goat 80 cristy by special dispensation from | F'€¢: guard of his holiness. A considerable | receiving an apolication of the corrective rod 1 ¢ foy 1. &, | Inmakinga Masonic Art association, the For low price is nearly finished. 1t was designed by E. 8. Raht, of New York city. : Miss Elaine Goodale and Miss Dora Read o O1d Rel purpose of which 18 to purchase works of art oome 1o.tha Old Heliabigy ?‘{‘)’?r)g:mx character for the adornment ot !hi"p l-.ng|L3£° F.rn.m s'. Both banks of the Hudson,from the Liberty statue to Albany, have been photographea in detail. The photographs are to be published in book form, and will greatly aid the eyes Bashful Bridegroom. Rochester, (N, Y.) Herald: A justice of the peace in Saratoga county recently joined a pair who were so embarrassed that ll\e)" hardly knew what they were doing. The man wore a white straw hat, which he whirled on his finger before the ceremony began. When told to stand up he iumped before the justice with Fmt alacrity. For a fow moments he did not know what to do with his hat, but finally found his way out of the dif- ficulty by putting it between his knees. ‘L'his was too much for the bride. With the handle of her parasol she caught the hat, Kullod it from its position, and then, abashed at her audacity, drovped hat and parnsol to the floor. The same justice tells astory of another couple who came to be married. The man was dreadfully puzzled, and with- out realizing the act pulled a cigar from his pocket and began twirling it around. When that portion of the ceremony reached where bride and groom jo! hands he happened to have ths cigar in his right hand. What to do with he cigar he apparently did not know. The jus- tice pauserl a minute, and then agamn di- rocted the pair to join hands. By this time the poor fellow's embarrassment was painful. He guave one agonizing look at the justice of the peace and stuck the eigar in his mouth. efore the cere- mony could be concluded the justice had ;n take the cigar from between the wman's ips. the ~ pope. The ecclesiastic who blessed the Belgian baron and the heiress on this oceasion was Bishop Sis- son, I like to see a bride go frem the vaternal home with all the triumphal eircumstance of white satin and orange blossoms. and followed by a long train of brilliantly dressed and sympathizing friends. "There was nothing of this at the triple “van’’ and Rothschild marri- nge. But there was that admirable thing—without which every tridal isa poor pair—a bride's face expressing the most entire confidence in the man she had resolved to take, for better or for worse, against the long-kept-up opposi- tion of the powerful tribe to which she belonged by birth, ‘The position of the bridegroom at Brussels 18 a good one. He is a brother- in-law of M., Van de Vetde de van Zuylen, whose name is familiar to every reader of the Independence Belge, or any cther Brussels paper, Viscomte Louis de Thury, one of the bride's witnesses, be- longs to the most clerical of the Faubourg St. Germain families. Mr. Sandford, the other witness, is an American, and was in diplomacy. 1 think, seeing that the newly married baroness is one of the t;mm-at heiresses of the day, it is well hoth for her and the baron that she has taken her own course in getting mar- ried and broken with her tribe in doing so. She will obstinately, if she hns womanly pride, shut her eyes to his little faults and keep down her own whims and humors when indulgence in them nmight tend to weaken the bond which holds them together. The best wives are those who bave made a choice against strenuous oppositiou from their own rel- atives, ‘L'he reason is that they would not for the world expose themselves to be reminded of all the evil that was pre- dioted of their willfulness before they plunged into the ery of the ring. Married and Linprisoned hy a “Count' "+ New York Journal: That wus.a strange looked up to his offended mother, who had told him of his prehistoric whereabouts, ana said: 0, mamma, I wish LU'd staid o | heaven.” Goodale will spend the coming winter at Little two-year-old Robert at the breakfast | Smith colleze, Northampton, Mass. table the other day heard his father and | Miss Cate, of the Milwaukee Training mother ecxhange the compliments of the | school, cousiders the newspaper more im- morning with their guests until he could | portant in geegraphical work than any text stand it no longer, and interrupted them | book. with: “Papa, let me tell my 'tory now. I | The will of Miss Dorathea L. Dix leaves to want some hash.” Haryard college many valuable flags and A legal gentleman has two little bays who | Parchments given her by the United States have been visiting their grandfather’s plan- | Kovernment. tation In the south, and in boyish fashion | ~Mrs. Jessie P. Barnes, of Brooklyn, has one day th re speculating ‘on their fu- | been elected a member of the faculty of ture fortunés. *“I'm going to be a tarmer,” | Washington college, Irving, Cal., totake said one, *‘and raise lots of cotton.” “*Well,” | charge of the departient of musie, said the other, “I'm going to bea lawyer, The Nashville American expects great like papa, and steal it all away from you.' things of the gradual introduction of Indus- A wee maiden, as many other small chil- | trial’ education into the southern schools. The dren have done, had the isfortune to fall | system has already gained a firm foothold in down stairs the other day, and, in landing at | Vanderbilt university. the foot, that part of the anatomy commonly Ira Davenport has recently endowed a denominated the “funny bone” ¢ame in con- | gcholarship in Hamilton college for the ben- tact with the wall with ‘more force than was | efit ot worthy young men who are graduates calculated to make a comfortable impression. | of the Haverling academy, the academic de- On being picked up and asked ifshe was | partment of the Bath, N. Y., public schools. rubbed her arm for a moment and The Columbia universit v o v 4 TR y freshman who 0, but my l“m,“ 18 awtul dizzy. has died from injuries received in a “cane A littledot of Duluth's feminine humanity | yysh” with the sophomores has left behind a whio has not yet learned to put all the cor- | jagson which ought not to be lost upon col- Riiday school “pichic xearsion b tho bay | 1940 studeuts or collage facaltios. this woek. At dinner she was given an adut a3l ;'y"“,',‘f‘.";’l‘fifi’é’;f,"sm‘; Alsaley, Slisesla plece of custard ple, and o her infantile five minutes out of the twenty-four hou gyrations succeeded in talling down and get- | /16 P are 500 girls, and _every girl is trained Uing 8 plaster cast of ber haud. Hising with to do one kind of work, ana to do it quickly ruflied feelings and dishevelied locks, she | o o6 kin ey b el lifted the unfortanate member to the attitude | $00 Well: Uo-operation saves a vast deal o ’i.glmku&on and exclaimed, “Mamma, take “"‘\f’h::‘er u: ‘:“;mm" s AT s cussed pie.” B! ? T| el rises at 51n the morning, or, rather, he is There is a clever lad n town who will got supposed to do8o. The first bell Fings at 5 his living in this world and no mistake. For T to tell it he 18 to get up, & second one playing truant maternal authority cut off his | ;K W B AU G T8 R0 KL B B OB supper. Casting one fond look tothe author- | FRkS Bt BIE0 10 A0I0TE Tt Hak Jf FFEIRUR €8s of his existance, he paused at the door to 'l-'.iganjonn him to leave the dormitory say: “Mother, I am fiolng to die, and when I "-l o Nehprarpig ey B T, L e s s OF SR me ohe | mechanical schiools have besn estabilshed and lool my sl D . heart was lillvdy\\'llh awful forebodings, and | Louisiana has twenty-one industrial lcntlml»l. the maternal voice asked what it meant. *I | in which 3,126 DO,{,- are instructed in mec! bR wish itto be known,” he answered, “that 1 { ical branches. here 1s agrowing desire daled of starvation. ‘Ihis was enough. 'the | 8mong the boys of the south learn small boy retired to his littie bed gorged to | mechanical repletion, At Oxford, Obio, quite a number of white l"m of the trousseau has been ordered in Paris, through a French lady who often winters in Kome. The pope give it, and also the dowry, which is not inconsider able—£4,000. © His holiness has three nephews and nieces. The eldest nephew is a country gentleman at the family seat of Carpineti. The second is a noble guard. The third married a South Ameri- can lady of brilliant expectations, Two of the nieces are married to Italian noblemen of family and good fortune. Enriched by Marriages. Ocean Grove (N. J.), Corr. New York Herald: Among the familiar faces and figures that can be seen any day on the sands here is that of Rev. Dr. John T. Dobbins,the *‘Pastor Schneider” of Cam- den, N. J. Dr. Dobbins, like Pastor Schneider, “the Second avenue joiner,” as he is sometimes called, has got rich by marrying people. For over two years Dr. Dobbins has averaged 175 marriages & month. Since settling in Camden it is estimated that he has joined in the holy bonds of matrimony no less than 5,000 couples. Most of them came from Penn- sylvamia, Philadelphia contributing the greatest number., A friend of the doctor's who oughtto know claims that the aver- age feo paid him by the groom is more than .g He estimates Dr. Dobbin's earnings in marriage fees, however, at $25,000 since January, 1886. The lucky preacher is known to have received over $300 in one week for tying the matri- monial knot. He lives quietly, is a man of simple tastes, and is seemingly enjoy- ing his brief respite from marrying ana zu ;Il‘slng young couples just starting out n life. Rosebudsin a Divorce Sult, Minneapolis Journal: The dreary mo- notony of a divorce case was draggin, its soiled la::fth along in Judge Hick's court yesterday. The woeful contest- ants were listening - eagerly, when a bundsome, broadshouldered youth en: | Minneapolis. Branch Offices, |Km.... &y | Very Mixed Helationships. Baltimore American: A rare and cau- tious mixture by marriage and inter- marriage between two well-known tam- ilies of Rahway and Plainfield, N. J.,was further mixed last week bmlm union of Joseph W. Savage of hway, with Susan C. Pike, of Plamnfield. The groom is the son of -ex-Mayor Joseph Savage. His father was married lfireu times. Noah W. Pike, tho father of the bride of lust week, hus been twice warried, The of travelurs who view the country from the deck of a North river steamboat. Walter G, Robinson, of Auburn, N. Y., has modeled a standing fignre of Williain H. for that city. ‘Ten of Meryon's etchings of Parls views : have been issued by the Autotype company u erln en en s of London, with an essay by Mr. Stopf and the apse of that cathedral, One of the illustrations in Mr. Samuel 26 I B k. Adams Drake’s *“I'he Making of the Great ron ban West,” gives an llent idea of & “publo,” ture, constituting in itself a little wallea dity. Snow Is said to have'a deleterious effect on marble, causing it to ecrumble. Sendtner, of phere sulphurous and sulphuric acids. whic may account for the deterioration of marble in towns. ‘The American colony in Paris are talking for the erection in the French capital of col- ossal statues of Washington and Lafayette, by way of return for the magniticent gift of Bartholdi's “Liberty.” ery that & Krench plaster moulder named Hubard has in his' possession a full-size bronze copy of the marble statue of Wash ington bp "Houdon, whi: he will sell for £500, HODGSON & SON, Seward with one hand ralsad in the attitude Brooke as a preface. They include the Mor- as it existed in a complete condition. The a— Munich, claims that from analysis he has dis- about raising a fund by subseriptions amon | Felix Regamy,a Parisian artist, well known 3 Mr.( lh-mflny‘ fi;\u‘;'luh in the Paris izaro that the United States government Ethase the Bronse statoe e sresent 1t ts | ¢ FOR SALE EVERYWHERE allery of the Louvre, . asked to contribute a fund tocast it in bronce | I gue, the seulptured monster of Notre Dame, “pueblo” was & unique specimen of architee- covered that snow absorbs from the atnos- themselves and their fellow-citizens at home In Boston, has made the interesting discoy. The Saratoga monument Is to be dedicated