Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 12, 1888, Page 16

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SUNDAY. AUGUST 12, 1888--SIXTEEN PAGES ARE LOOKING FOR A DESIRABLE LOCATION FOR A HOME SHOULD NOT FAIL TO SEE EE PLAGCE S A DELIGATRUL PLACE! BEING HIGH, AFFORDING A CHARMING LANDSCAPE VIEW! PROPERTY RESTRICTED, INSURING FIRST CLASS SURROUNDINGS. THE STREETS ARE NOW BEING PUT TO GRADE! Call at OUR OFFICE for FULL PARTICULARS, PRICES, TERMS, BUILDING LOANS, Etc. UR SALESMEN AR: READY AT ALL TIMES TO SHOW THIS PROPERTY! THE PATRICK LAND COMPANY, SOLE OWNERS. Room 25, Chamber of Commerce, Omaha, Nebraska. W. H. CRAIG, President, N. D. ALLEN, Vice-President and Treasurer, W. K. KURTZ, General Manager EMPIRE OF ’"]E RISING SL H::x :lnlxix:tfi::“ll\|‘(}u‘l.|jsli“m-':-{: :?'l‘l‘l‘i‘;i‘t!”‘ dress may probably have produced an \1\'hilo the Japanese are making won- THE “’lZARDOF“‘}iI;L STI‘REET his business reverses so much to heart | in his marvellous acquisitions by tha N idiotic stare, for the Japanese laughed | derf progre in all that affects m that he committed suicide. highest court authority. l\[x-l x'zin and rn.r&'lr:\m‘:_ h::dl_ln'cn !Lm"cl heartily, Im;\'-'d :I‘;.'uin] nml‘\\'ni‘ut hi i while railroads and tele- On his visits to New York Mr. Gould The manner in which he managed okohama, and for that time at les way. irst thought which sug i being built and oper- attracted by the greater advan- | get Western Union into his hands afford A Land Where an Artistic Liar is [ the Japanese form remained a mystery. mml«[wl ‘;|~l f was mlhinl ln\rl:o ;:u\'ln'lu- fiml: while Tokio has electric h;_v'hh. Methods and Means Whica Have | tag ch the Empire City afforded a vory striking illustration of his methe Appreciated. We have been flooded with literatur ment tha V' d nations keep their | street cars, brick buildings and almost " for extending his business, and came | ods s secret of his success, D b b ant SR rect oIty in an nsylum. But some time | every improvement, we owo to this con- Won'Him Greatness. here to resiqe. He had ingratiated | When first laying his schemes to ol 4 3 7 . | much of this writing is jihas 2 3 ;l( \\uflnullul an lunu\hlh gram- | tary; while the nation is making prepar- hrim.-n-lf in the favorable esteem of ono tain ;Iw:-uu(ml of the telegraph prope UEER DOMESTIC RELATIONS can it be othe 2?7 An Englis 4 itten for Japanese students by | ations to advance a step further by of the lenther merchants with whom he rty he got a construction compan, 5 Sihny travels over this continent, and upon Dr. Brown. The author had appended | changing from an mum-rntlh-, into a con- EAREVIBUSINESS (SREGULATIONS. had done busine The merchant took | to build a tele ph line. This was : 5 3 his return rushes into print; we know | & number of English-fapanese sen- | stitutional government; the relations of | him to hishouse to board and Mr. Gould | company of exceedingly modest protegs APeculiar Greeting—The Interchange | j o0 idiculous are some of the stat tences, the fivst of which was the extra- | the home circle remain the same, and | Methods ofObtaining Control of Other fell in love with his handsome daughter. | sions It had a capital of only 000, Divorce and Marriage ments made by these superficial ob- | Ordinary allocution by this stranger, | will prove a serious obstacle in sealing It was & mutual affair of the hear! It built the lines of the Wester) e servers of our social and political lifa, | Who was evidently studying English | the height of civilization reached by that of his son George and Miss Bdith | Union Telegraph Company, with Which Soit isin Japun. A writer, no matter and anxious to give evidence of his | the caucasian race. a Fine Ari—How He Got the Kingdon, and a speedy marri Mr. Gould paralle of the impor how elose an observer he might be, can : 3 § Ss Western Union. the result. The results happy | tant lines of the Western Union, “"i — only give his improssions, and many. of f s largely depending on HONEY FOR THE LADIES, union seem to have been couid | cut the rates until der and large Kingdom of the Mikado. these are obtained through the eye of | the home relations of the people. R e be desired, and the domestic felicity of | corporation found that its profits werq S e ra et Tt my s Iygamy, that curse to all moral and in- | R 48 40 Rana e Jay Gould Mr. and Mrs. Gould, so far as the public | being reduced toward the vanishing Weritten for The Bee. an interpreter. The best book on | [} o oval n- | cloth is trimmed with erescents of rich pas- . 2 5 Mr. and Mrs. Gould, publi ing re avd the vanishing Distance is annihilated in th days | Japan is Grifis’ “Empire of the Mi- ctual progress, was permitted in | sementerie. Honry Clows, in New York Commer- | have been able to as < has never | point, Then it was glad to muke termy of steam and electricity. Tho events of | K2do,” but its author was totally una Japan, ulthough its practice was lim- Many basques are trimmed with full fronts | ¢ial Advertiser: If Fennimove Cooper, | suffered the slightest jar or interrup- with its competitors a union of interestd g PSS quainted with the native tongue, and ited. The emperor had, and has as far | of silk, in some hghter shade than the color | Sir Walter Scott, Charles Dickens or | tion. was the result, and Mr. Gould obtain the morning at one particular point of | {5000 100 nC of domestie life were we know. twelve by-wives, although he cloth worn On his entrance to Wall street he be- | control of the united concern. this planet are read and commented | ghtained from Japanese students who | the first wife only has the title of em- very pretty jacket of marine blue cloth, | - Cf0 ) s DL Ol [ wan Lusivess alone. Afterward he f “Tmpossibles” said Norvin Green, in upon at the antipodes in the ovoning | naturally prosentad everything in & | Bress; butull the children were legiti- | lined with plaid ailk, Is trimmed all around any of these great writers of fiction, had 1 foped a partnership with Heory N. | B dudgeon, when the insidious ins paper. The physical, intellectual and | rose “hue . 7. for to tell a li ma Monogamy isgen mong the | With a narrow gold passementerie. evolved from his inner consciousness a - Smith and — Martin, the firm tak tentions of My, Gould were broached (} People's Property Reduced to of Civilization. Dumas, in the height of popularity of i o 2 SEH: weople, although the question of Stuffs with printed borders are again | Jay Gould as the hero of a novel, its | the name of Smith, Gould & M . | him a few months before the settlemer moral progress or reaction of wost na- | 18 10 sin in i ““““‘\‘."‘”“ ' it pl AL asod o gicls! summer frocka, and. tho n..‘:d(.,. would have found serious fault | Martin is now in a luuatic asyh fhol plisa. Tt wauld bankevib Gou tions is apparent and disseminated Dy | 0 SRR SRR ARSI ES pan. The fact 15, the relations of | full round skirts have the border as a hem. e il ; 7 Henry N. Smith, who was the chief | and 21l his connections to parallel oup the omnipresent wire, und what was | fajdehood that [ inguired of the home life of this people are exceed- walkin of navy blue and white | % o ) 3 cause of the fuilure of William Hoeath lines, and to talk of harmony between considered a utopia, the idea of proter about the man’s char ) ingly strange. There is no courtship. h_:”‘l Jalx’_co ‘l\“H“-‘-:_Aw:l with nav biue | cend the rationat !“"')"“"‘1“_-‘ allowed to | (o fop $1.000.000, is now a poor pen- | him and us is the wildest kind of specus tbrotherhood of nations, sooms to grow | was the reply, “‘he is a fox.” Insisting | 1f & Japanese wants a wife for his son, oA s a - waisteoat of white fancy | the latitude of fiction. Few novel read- | sioner on the bounty of his wife, ‘But | lation.” The genial doctor was then B be as tho conturs Tto | Upon an explanation, T elicited the facy | he sends his chief attendant among the | 5l i ghicks of tudded | €T, in fact, would have patiently sub- | Mr. Gould still towe oft, in the | mus of the situation in Westorn, IRRSUBROREIDO0 85 ThO ;00N LULY NONLS that lying 1s considered “'smart.” The | different families of his own rank. A wiing with isticke of Jgors-ave, studded | mitted to such a strain on their éredu- [ full enjoyment and the continued pro- Uniou, or imagined himsclf so at that elose. Tt is notso long ago since Japan | Thib WK 18 CONSICRROE T | ue | suitable givl being found, thisattendant | o amber balls are amon the latest Yith tope | lity prior to the era in the financial de- | gressof his speculative prosperity, with- | time, and regarded with contempt thy was o terra incognita; o land inhab- | EOMEEE 0 auhts A statement | communivates with his colleague of the | the shekels of fair women § i velopment in this country which pro- | out being dismayed by any competitor, | efforts of Gould and his colleagucs tq §tated with strange people, with another | of a friend or noquaintance, he will | Pride’s family: he returns to”give the | Very small mantels with lace hoods are | duced some of the leading chavuctors | however powor i, nd ovorcoming all | bring the tompany to terms. = Iu a fo ivilization, with customs and mannors | ojaculate: *Uso bk that is only | vesult of his negotiations, presents a worn “with thin toilets by young women at | Which Wall street has brought to the | obstacles, no matter how gigantic. | mouths uftorward the doctor tamel ¢ which we knew nothing countey | o liol—and both will wh in the best- | inter-changed between the two fumilic garden partics and so on, but otherwise | front, as stern realities of every day The modus operandi of My, Gould, in [ submitted to play sccond fiddle to thi Y e 2158 s | e e 4 and a day 1s appointed when the bride | "Vraps are contined to the mére than middle- | life, since my advent in the arcna of | the purchase and sale of railvonds, has | little man whom he had formerly desg 80 walled in by the seclusion of centur- | B ] 3 will came to the house of her future | sged speculation. been to buy up two or more bad roads | pised. ies, that the imagination ran riot |, ‘, good ”';“‘.“‘“{‘l“‘,',‘:‘ stapremini | ushand. There is some entertaining nges of twisted silkare again i fashion, | Among these Jay Gould is consp put them together, give the united | The ngement in veference to the' in its anxiety to draw the curtain and | (f SN Lo s called i foxs ®well.of | g ‘the part of both families, but no Il as guipure lace of heavy pattern, and | ous, and of all the self-made men of | roads a new name, call it a good, pros- | cable companics followed the capture of A A } . ruching pinked out in Sk PR Ee e T AR T B atern I nion.: (Lo sixtealetat shill R e T e a hid 4t of || thednnumorah ines devoted t0the | gijyop cavemony. 1f the wife is not to c ing - pinked out in petal | Wil strect he had probably the most | perous line, with jmmense prospects iu o Union, The straggle is stil)| revenl to tho world a hidden phuse of | several deities, those dedicated to Rey- pes, While jet, we are told, has a new | gimio iy in making the first thousand | the immediate future, get great num- [ pending for the entive monopoly in the A eai-pdedBy Wi 1 her husband’s liking, he may send her | Joage of life, though only in the first quali- 2 human existence. l(.umu\mlwu,l |‘ \l !]':ll\ltl :lllll||\i\|n.hurlzl\ll¥.|]hu>{\.\‘.Lv |4?§:'l:||\lt‘ll.‘ home to her parents, without going .n. of life, though only i the first quali dollars ‘of the amazing pile which he [ ber of people to believe Al - this. then | cable businoss, and it now scems only came and Japan reluctantly submiued | These shrines, placed as thoy ave in the zh the divorce court, and ente g laab awraatitnin e in bonnats is tamd (RO LONLEG! ; i ke large issues of honds and sell hem | qiestion of time when tho - Rund to resume intercourse with foreign | FLUH N '-vll- VAT L b i new venture in the matrimonial se shell, which is wrought into a comb Jay Gould was born at_Stratton Falls, [ ata good price, for the purpose of fuv- | Mackay pavty will have to succunb nations. Ports were opened to com- | (1ot MOTESIG ;:1‘.”“"‘”{"‘ AULRECSSH | gen, and coronet that tangle about in alot of ln Delaware county, New York, about the improving and utinncing the :'] aving G [H"ll in |"-.~{u1w]‘rm.)‘.‘..m“ ) f" B ) merohanta entered § n | turein the landscape, and add n But the quec custom, and one u s, 1 wpposed | yoar 1886, He was the son of John B, | value of the property. After these pre- | the news of the world. “If this she REWRRA JR0CT 1208 SR D SOREOR 1 Hiinle va it indesoribablo oharm ¥ that is not gener known is the in- i e overing, thouzh | Gould, a farmer, who kept a grocery | liminaries had Weougeh, if | Bappen be would becomo an immonsey BENBHLIE Y Ay e, trade was | the trayelar sxperishees Qurivg & terchange of boys, 'Mr. Kawakura hag | the effected is startlingly bareheaded. store. At the nge of sixteen young | profi ‘chasor along, they | power for either good ov evil both ind cousidered in Japan as one of the lower | journ in out of the way - | o boy, and to show his appreciation of | | The tight-fitting jacket, molding the bust .ame a clerk in a variety store | could s roud price that | speculation and polities. I fact, i avocations of life, and intercourse with | 188 or residents seem to travel only in { yifiiends kindness, gives him this | Jke s cuirass, is most in favor, Itdocs uot | helonging to Squire Burnh Mr. Goutd for | would be too great a monopoly to be eng, the higher and educated o5 was an | the beaten tracks. Tokio, with ‘the | gi{1q." Tho boy is formally adoptod in | B0ty oK e e v but ny | two miles from the Falls. Her all his labor and neute m ment. It | trusted to the will of one man, /\a with the author for attempting to trans- impossibility. Up to twenty years ago, | temples at Shiba, Oueno, and Azakusa. | his yow famly, and assumes all the R T S A leisure hours he assiduously improved | these ) to [ though it might be judiciously munag. absolutely nothing was known of the | i8 visited: perhans the tiny waterfall at | 14t and title belonging to it. He be- | soon will. the little learning he had sived at | run the v i W . the cup of his amoition would the; political ‘condition in - the Island Fn- (II‘JI‘I'O‘;!-:.I" i ‘:dfi“‘\ g I-‘lf'\"m]"{“‘E comes totally alienated” from his Tn stockings black is always worn, but | the village sehool, by applying himself | obliged to go into ligui attera | be ure "‘"‘{“‘."",‘v',“ experiment would SRR Thon came the oivil war, The | Lake Haione and the suipaur bathis ob | narants is disowned by them, 1y of the be: Y S avor the | tothe study of bookkeeping in the even- | year or tw f iently bappens, then "1"1‘ remely hazardous. Shoo-goon (Tycoon as he is evroneously | Atame are taken in and a_ hurried trip | Now "My, who has two sons, am and ecru ; a ings. ) Gould' or his agents would ve he controtling intevestin the elevadg ealled hy foreigners) was reduced to | t0 the Dai-Budzu (the immense statue of | §,0,,% of Ka 'u's generosity and, nog | With the tan shoes 0 sec - It was when he was at this store, ac- ly be found ou hand at the ted railronds of this city, recentl subthission, and the shi Sama— | Buddha) concludes the tour of Japan. | ¢}, gutdone, sends him one of his | to have stockings of quite the s cording to the most roliable nccounts, | take back the road at a greatly rednced [ achioved by Mr. Gould through hisbuse) mikado ik o term unknown in | NOW,a stranger cannot learn anything Kawakura tocepts this present | Shade. For evening ioilet the stocking ex- | thyt ho manifested his natural aptitude | price. Mr. Gould would then got u f (T08 and specuiative relations with Ars the Japancse tongue—resumed the | About Japan on his trip. He comes in | Wity thanks and young Iwuya bears | LY matehes the gown. for ‘making sharp and profitable bar- | fresh opportunity of showing the Supe- [ Cyrus W. Ficld, are of too recent datg Dhrane Tol s o e it | contact with natives who have been | thut teKs A0 O oty at Onee | L OF traveling there aro dust eloaks of gray | uiy;, " His employer, the squire, had | riority of his management. He would {0 require uny I notice or commed] i spoiled by o vi . ¢ ger, A glace silk that are the acme of elegant quie B & i _ 3 Tant Ao 1 he road | here. Suf ny, that I fear 50\'"'""9"\ inaugurated a new spoiled by their intercourse with un- ] as'the heir to_ Hawakura's name and | Slce silk that are the acme O ot owy | hiseveon a plece of land in Albany, | be able to demonsirata that the road | SRce, ot ¥, ar i, bstacles, in the way of free i principlea foreigners—for, notwith- | Lo noe ™ mhis strange procecding 18 | swedping gavments of bright red vengaline | Which he expected to obtain cheap and | had left his possession in excellent and | friend Mr. has' not come out af Gourse between the I-1in (western men, | tanding their obtusivencss s regards [ ProPerty: ThiS SWARES PEEECCCmE, T BMEOR O Kt fiots of binck lace, of elso | so muke a profit. Ho whispored his in- | progressive ' condition, but throwsh the big end of the horn although evorya the mame applicd to all foreigners), | ® filsehood, the natives are naturally | yhoce“yumed instance in which the | green, bedizned with yards of white ribbon. | tention to some friend in the store, and loose management had heen run down, | thing has no dou t been in conformity « wore removed and we were wllowed to | Serupulously houest—is fleeced to a | hrove MER RN e under the | A crepo effect can be given to nun's veiling | his young assistant overheard him. | He would then sot whout the work of | with the most approved busincss priny cast & glance behind the screen of so- | €onsiderable —extent and = & a tars observation. But another high | by dampening slightly, drawing through tho | When he went to put his design of pur- | reorgamzation agiin and go through | ciples, and in strict adherence cial and domestic life. mongrel mixture of old and | oot PN Matsu Noo. once said thag | hands and allowing it to dry, and when mado | chusing the land in execution he found | the sume role substantially, with slight -.-'m{[ honorable methods of Bt this took timo. . Aside from tho | Dew Japan. But go to old Fusi- | oot r e O oungest son. | OYor moire of its own shudey with small vest, | yhat young Gould had been there before | variations, s before, venlizing o hnd: | 16 S d socuritios. It s fact that the older Japanese were not | Y8ma, that grand mountain which in- | 4chila'of eight years, was of inuch ac: | Soars cuffs and pare ot Mewis, eopecialy | him. and had .d the title. e bvollt on each successive reorgan- | however, that Mr, Field iktioged to follow young Japan in ne- | SPires the uatives with s mystic awe, | &b hance: ho had given him t0 & | foe yames woaors. o ruin espoctally : 4 knowledging the superiority of our civ- | 80d whose likeness is veproduced by | jirikiska coolie! % Rt e eIl front 1o Alss he has been | Itwasus the managing powerof the Jization, they shrunk from exposing to | every landscape painter’s brush; then | ' SRUSTE'SS absolutely mastor of | play the gorgeons. footwaar now in vogue ruling passion | railroad that Mr. Goull laid the broad the curious the detailsof their domes- | strike up north if you wish to find nu- | s household; if he is attached to his !m\img Whlon low shoes of :fine white Liner is | L tel sly 5 | foundation of his fortune, ~ The money Wo sat beside the summer se tie life. Thad been two years in Japan | tives with all the ‘primeval vices and | \Gita and children, he is exceedingly | duck with scallopad tips aud facines of to him. Prior to his negotiations with | and influence which he tined in con- Bl tiaain i00 SUBMAD MM niat and had become intimately acquainted | Virtues of their forefathers. e o show it. The lifa of & | siest vatent leather or dark red Russia | the firm of surveyors, he had invented | nection with the Fuis corporaiion ¢he | - Her Ditle boot touched ‘me, ah me!= with many families, whenCarassu Marn Their politeness is excessive, al- | lady is exceedingly monotonous and to leather, are easily long favorites, tho amouse trap in his intervals of leisure | abled him to ext ud oporations iv How it did thrill me. B KGke. | o & relation of the Imperisl | though, since 1 1o an [nneiand aotan | our’ ideas . secimy unbonrable. The | &lipbers and low shoes of brouse and black | iy tho storo, and with tho proceeds of | tho uequisition of rijie b RIOHIREY M | s saws.: o ald salons family, died. Having been on visiting | Al quality, its expression is more | dressing of the hair consumes many | buckles, are the correct thing for full-dress | this and the bargain in the land, out of | til, throu _;5 1:lu<\l\> ’.’\-:hu“;:‘.‘ d lin varts Bpihartiatiee. cama. the old elanky terms with the deceased, Mr. Go-jio, 1 ng than otherwise The deep | hou the painting of the | occasions. which he had outwitted his emplover, | ous connections, | ; " i & i Har a0 ShR, LEAE Tok his brother-in-law, was notified of rmy aam, the flowery address, remind us | face, neck and lips take ¢ Lindsay, of Tennessce is the | he was enabled to make himself master | of southw n T:»u\-. it secmod pr oy It thrills me ye intention toattend the funeral. Sev- | foreibly that we are in the Orient, and | as many more. The houschola Avtagansett Plor. Shois | of the situstion with the surveyors. | ble ut ono time it ho was in 8 fuit Wiy o e eral objections were raised but over- | when we meet a native who has ac- | duties ure performed by the servants; | a pure brunette with black huir in coils | Shortly after this @ man named Loup, grasping the-entipe coatral of te 2.5 Parbuga of » Of Ruwla, ’ come. It must be acknowedged that quired English by books instead of by | there is no going into society: the only around a pertectly »lm;n*\lAl.u d, black e) who owned a tanuery in ¥ x'lvAI.l‘\_\l\'ilvvl‘I(;, L \;,:..‘..,\mn\nlnl-‘lu‘m:A in .H.-r‘w Suliroad ".‘m:: ““:-:x‘i::xl{? "? cured b subc "l‘a. curiosity to witness the obsequics of a | actual intercourse, we cannot helpbeing | amusement, if it can be called by that oy Auls_Aad. Hee the red, red ross, and & | who was looking out for a partie \'\u; majiars: And kls i |I“_M.“‘ L0 e T LeuR D RN e G6 M3 884 le‘ noble contributed not a little to the de- | struck by what might seem to us fulso | name, is an occasionul excursion with o "‘..-r“ffl‘;‘l":"";,“ll‘ A at o suspicion of | a little money, and who was aiso o good lio, ghiue [ Rispariin ot one graui to 200 ¢ l...,“(., sire, and my astonishment and disap- | adulation. The writer, while m:\kinga her husband to some place of resort, B g 8t A TS PO, | Mdrummer,” . MY, Gould made an pre R TR A Y o T Bt 1 ‘I“I‘* ‘40 bo:injaoted every pointment may be imagined when, | tour through Japan, was walking hi§ | generally a temple of national reputa- round, white, plump arms. She is rangement with him, be lmu_‘;‘l'n mber t 3 -:'[ o gl ok s By H“'\_"' d Aour ht .,{ en reaching the house of mourning, | horse upon entering a village, whea a | tion. Among the lower classes, she is | about five feet high. weighs 125 pounds, and of the firm, cut off ”"i mia -rf‘mvn. ol ) l‘nlhv‘llvi"lllii\' 0 ‘;P“I ) ‘u. ‘l‘e:'l‘ :l- IHl[u‘ il .l""]' Ifound a hearse and carriage in wait- | well-dressed native scized the biidle, | the chief slave; does ull the wor and, | is declared on all sides to be the handsomest | came to ¢ York and obtained cus- ' Dy & 0 the dignity g r. Por 07, that “'the ing. The gentlemen were in full dress | and, aftor making the usual bow, ac’ | if she happens ‘to live in the country, | Firla: the pier this season tomers divoct from the wholesale ! This urb hos' | fist aitownt to resune dujnklog weild crape around the mrm and hat. | costed him in laborious Englisk with: | must help him in his field labor. Lydia Thompson is said 10 be coming back | leather men, and iu three yeure bought | Shroug ok produce such puainful and nausea ing All I suw was a ceremong exnctly like A —-bowknot~is-—easily—to—untie.” It seems & hoveless task to undertake | next season, bringing with her, among her | Out his partner and ran business him 3 He has had sensations that he will turn away froum those im our streets, with the excep | This strange proceeding snd ad- | the . amelioration of this condition. | train of dizsy buricsquers, Violes Cameron. | self. Loup, the frozen-out partnes; took di¢ every time, und been supported 1 the liquor in disgust.” This natural inclination to buy out | ization a prudent reticence on the subject.

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