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- " THE OliAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. SPECIAL SALE-OF DRY GOODS R N - - — = - B Goods Store, 1310 and 131 2 Farnam Street. Morning, Monday SEPTEMBER 30, 1888, —SIXTEEN PAGES. October 1st Anad for balance of the week we shall make some vrices on Dry Goods, which will melt the heart of the most obdurate. Please examine the following list of Dress Goods Department. AN 18 INCH BLACK SATIN FOR k8¢, Did you ever see a Satin for that price! You can sec one Monday morning. Only a few pieces to sell, NUMBER 2. A 54-INCH GERMAN TWILLED BROADCLOTH AT $1-37.4: A REGULAR %2 CLOTH. ‘We have these goods in the new fall shade, ete. We find that there is a great scarc of these goods in the market, owing to the demand, and we cannot duplicate our purchase. These are beautiful goods, splendid finish; only small quantity left for sale. If you need a cloth suit see our cloth before buying. NUMBER 3. ONE CASE WOOL CASHMERES, At 9 Cents, These are in plains and fancies, all colors, and usually sell at 12}c to 15¢ a yard' NO. 4. A 19-INCH SILK PLUSH FOR 67ic, USUALLY SOLD AT 31.00. This is a special value a Silk Plush and worthy of your inspection. There 18 a large demand for Plushes this season. We bought these goods very early :;om the best source in eastern supply and have them in all colors. Call and see em. gobelin, blue, terracotta, Resion, NO. 5. A 22-INCH SILK MERVEILLEUX PLUSH AT $1.75, IN ALL THE NEW SHADES AND COLORINGS. Wa toke pleasure in calli your attention to this bargain as it is a good one. It would bring $2.25 a yard and sell readily. Ladies’ who have seen these goods pronounce them equal toanything in the market. NO. 6. 14 PIECES COLORED GROS GRAIN SILKS At $l. This is a special purchase in colored Silks and we propose to give our custom- ers the henefit of it; beautiful goods and we feel safe in claiming that it is the best value 1n colored silks, offered this season. An inspection will prove this. Special Bargains which we offer IMPORTANT. Special dispatch received. from Mr. Logie, now in New York: NEW YORK, Sept. 28, 1888. To E. W. Osgood, New York Dry Goods Store, Omaha: Have bought for cash, at half price, some Black Silks and Kid Gloves, Sell them at cost and give our customers the benefit of the pur- chase, A. R. LOGIE. (Copy of telegram.) The goods mentioned above, we will place on sale Tuesday, at 45¢ per yard for the silk, andJ45c per pair fot the gloves, and it is safe for us to say that these are the cheare't goods of the kind ever offcred in Omaha. The quantity is limited and an early call is advised. Thegloves are heavily embroidered backs, excellent quality, 4-button length, and the silk is a rare silk fabric. 5 Remnants of Dress Goods, very cheap. IL.ook at them. Do not miss this sale if you haveanything to buy. We feel confident you will fl advertise. A. R. LOGIE, nd the goods just as represente Mail orders will receive our careful attention. 1810 and 1812 Farnam Street NQ. 7. OUR ALL 'Silk Plush Sacques, This garment wins all hearts: wo place it beside anything in the countey, I is full length, satin lined, perfect fitting, made by the most successful manule® turers. Ve are ready to gunrantee thatno such garment in point of style. 3 ity-and workmanship was cver brought to Omaha for the monoy. This is our leade® and we take pleasure in showing it. The cold weather is at hand, so cull and 888 it, whether you wish to purchase now or not. No. 8. SHAWL DEPARTMENT. ble, plain and faney. NO. 0. AN g8 JACQUARD VELVET SHAWL At $15; Bxtra heavy full size and deep, kuotted [ringe, also reversible, NO. 1v. OUR IMPORTED SCOTCH BEAVER SHAWL At $8. This Shawl is made in the newest crochet designs and will bear compatristn w ith any $12.00 shawl. NO. 11. AT $2.75, A A DOUBLE WOOL SHAWL Worth $4. This price is made to close them out, as our stock s small on this uuw n you need anything in the way of a shawl this winter, we are prepared to the P LINEN DEPARTMENT. 100 DOZEN 36-INCH TURKISH TOWELS AT $1.30 A % NO. Y s a Staple Towel which sells for $2.40 a dozen. We offer them for week at 81.50; they are very choap. NUMBER 13. 100 DOZEN 40X20 INCH LINEN HUCK TOWELS, At $2.75 a Dozen. Fine size, grass bleached, extra quality. ‘The best value ever offered in Omiiiy Just received from New York for this sale. NUMBER 14. 100 DOZEN 42x22, LINEN DAMASK TOWELS, Extra Heavy, $2.25 a Dozen. d. Itis a principle with us to always have what we AMONG THE ELECTRICIANS. | S5 svisas tho scpavaion. o tarne possible, of the two kinds of conductors, and this also is, we believe, now recog- A Talk on Batteries, Wires and | nized to hclzhu better practice, in this country. It is interesting to note that Bl the rosults obtained with continuous and alternating currents do not differ THE POWER OF ELECTRICITY. | essentially, and that by the employment of what is known as the concentric cable, i. e., one in which the outgoing Artillery and the Electric Light—Elec® | and returning circuits are placed one tricity in Medicine—New York within the other, i}nu‘\m“y from all i Cara tHamming effects of induction is obtained. New York Street Cars, SraWires, Electrical World: It is, we think, impossible to exaggerate the import- Artillery and the Electric Light. ance of the work now being done on the The electric light seems destined to | Fourth avenue in the introduction of play almost as important a part on land | electric street cars. There are many a8 on sea in the next big European war. | fentures special to this pieco of work, The Austrians are constructing port- | giving it uuusunl‘}wominnnce and sig- able electric light | to be used in | nificance. New York city, to begin entraining and detraining troops at [ with, is peculiarly suitable for demon- night. The Germans are going to have | strations of an improvement of this a similar portable plant attuched to | character, and our firm conviction is their siege trains. g‘ivm\:ly some Ing- | that the more the public see of the lish batteries, now engaged in experi- | storage cars the more they will insist mental practice at Dartmoor, have been | upon having them. So far as the pub- amusing themselves by endeavoring to | lic is concerned, the element of expense destroy some electrio light apparatus | does not enter into the matter any more erected by & party of engineers from | than it does into the agitation against €hatham.” Up to the present only a | bobtail cars. It is enough that the cars mizum of damage has been done to | are swift, clean and safe, easily con- t' reflector. The experiments have | trolled, do not in the slightest degree been made on the basis that the search | affect the paving of the roadbed, save light is being used by an enemy ad- | the horses from a cruel fate, abolish the yancing on the camp, - Whether we are | malodorous car stables, lighten the to attribute the immunity of the vlant | work of the drivers, and ave free from to bad shooting or to the blinding effect | all the objections that can be raised of the ray, is not mentioned. against either the steam elevated road 2 — or the surface cable cars, On the other Electricity in Medicine. hand, storage cars are cheaper than Referring 1 the paragraph which ap- | hopse cars to run, and that is the main peared in some ot the daily papers last | point for the operating companies; week of the restoration to sight through | while there is another enormous ad- a flash of lightning at Wolverhampton | vantage in the fact that the change of a collior who some time ago lost his | from the old system to the now sight through an_accident, we thirk, | can be made = gradually, Then says tho London Electrical Review,that | again, the adoption of storage for such this is & matter which should occupy | a'road as the Fourth avenue isa very the attention of those medical gentle- | hopoeful and cheering sign, not only of men who are interested in the applica- | the liberal policy marking'the Vander- tion of electricity for curative purposes. | bilt ragime of to-day, but of the pros- me time back Dr, Lawrence wus try- | pacts of electricity in urban passenger ng some very interesting experiments | trafiic erally. If storage cars thus with regard to reducing the thickness | find favor with one of the largest and of the albumen of the eye by passing | most conservative managements in the light currents of eleotricity through | country, one may well be sanguine ns to the bull to reduce it to fluid. " He tried | the future. We have but one eriticism hisexperiment by heating in water the | 4o offer on' the new cars, suggosted by white of un egy, and after having | the successful trials, namely, that they caused it to set reliquified it with great | are almost 100 massive and hawdsome, SUCCeRS hi' assing currents through it. | Porhaps it is not our business, but still The wedical profession might now insti- | wo believe that the car bodies might be .tute a keries of experimonts upon the | huilt much lighter without losing sta- influence Of electric shocks in cases of | bility. partial or total blindness, and we will undertake ta say that the result would P \he #udy well worth pursuing. ness, which was in a nascent state a few The Difficulty Met. days ago, is now developing at an even Eleotric World: Shortly after the | faster rate than the eleotrio light busi- telephone industry had become well | ness, though the amount of capital in- established, the fntroduction of the | vested and the value of the plant is electric light made manifest the dis- | comparatively smail. At the present turbivg influence which the conductors | time thore are in use in Boston, for k- earrying heavy currents had upon tele- | ample, a large number of s7ali motors phone circuits; and the cries of despuir | for various purposes, furnishing in all of the telephone managers at the uau- | about, rpoyy! oughl timating, 500-h noyance were frequently heard. Tt did | power, In ?\:lvyv g'sml-’l:moi;.‘yg it is nosr:: not take lunF.huwuwr. to discover a | mated that there is about S00-horse remedy for the ovil complaingd of, and | power furnished by electrio motors for y the wethod of minning electrio | varioussmall industries. In Philadel- {\ und telophone wires side by side | phia there are a cousiderable number L 0uL disturbance is well understood | of electric motors in constant use, and d gonerally put in practice. Never- | tho same is true of Buffalo, Cincinnati theless the roport of v.{m committee ap- | and Cleveland, and their number is The Power of Electricity. Iron Age: The electric motor busi- nted to investigate this question in | rapidly growing in all the large cities. 'many, and the tests they he ve made | In Chicago and Detroit the number is in connection with it, are intercsting as | smaller and the use somewhat restricted confirming the practice generally | owing to the efforts being made by mu- pted here; and we would draw at- | nicipal authorities to have the wires tention particularly to the results of gm underground and the consequent their experimonts with regard to the | difficulty in making ndditions to the fnfluence of the iron covering for under- | systems of overhead wires. The motors lround cables in the prevention of in- | in use range in power from one-half- uotion between the conductors in con- | horse power to 15-horse power. A number of motors of one-sixth horse power ana others of 25-horse power are also in use. In addition to the largest cities mentioned above, there is a con- siderable number of smaller citi Lowell,Ne field, Mas: Woonsocl smaller tt, R. L., es of the Kansas City and other western cities. The question naturally arises as to the uses which these motors, furnishing as they do small amouuts of power, are put. In a general wi that they are employed in all those in- dustries and work which has formerly been done by a small amount of steam power or by the gas engines or water motors which have been quite extensively employed last few years. ployed for machinery, ing machinery, machines, washing other small uses. Perhaps the most motors at present is ing presses and sew! in each line a large and increassng number are constantly being used. The increase in the many different outside uses is even faster. sume much less coal nished than do smal. In the transferenc the dynamo and motor tothe machin- ery, about 20 or so per cent is lost, but even with this it can be seen that large power may be produced at a central station and sold cheaper than they small engines. motor business is of advantage to them ment and um-ninfi plant when it woul and profitless. done at night, and plant of the company is then employed, while during the day time it would be idle. The advantage to the gonsumer of electric power is found partly in the greater neatness, cleanliness and com paciness of the motor as compared with engines, and from the fact that the mo- tors require no attendance, and the power can be turned on or off by a The motors themselyes as switch, mechanical devices per cent cheaper than engines. In most cases the motors are sold outright tothe consumers, and the power 1s leased, but sometimes both ave leased. Electric Prostration. prostration™ is the name given to a disorder which troubles workars under electrict lights. Severe cases are reported from Creusot, France, “Electric where an- electric quickiy heating metals. The light ex- ceeds 100,000 cand men suffer from it, not from the heat. After one or two hoursthe workers have a painful sensation , such as_Bangor, Maine; uryport, Lynn and Spring- ; Providence,Pawtucket and driving sors, bookbinding machinery, bakers’ machinery, blowers, cranes, carpen- ters’ machinery, cash carriers, coffee mills, churns, drug mills,dumb-waiters, dentists’ lathes, drill presses, elevators, grindstones, hydraulic presses, hatters’ 'y, icecream freezers, jewelers’ lathes, knitting machines, lathe work- laundry machinery, looms, paper box machinery, polishing machines, piledriving,printing presses, quotation transmitters, sewing ma- chines, stamping machines, ventilating amount of power is needed the ic motor can supply it. The econ- omy of the stationary electric motor over small steam and gas engines is claimed to be considerable. Itis based upon the fact that large engines con- 1 1 Incandescent electric- light lighting companies can afford to sell the motor power cheap, as the This arises from the fact that most of the electric lighting is and temples, the skin becomes coppe lasts forty-eight hours, the discharge of tears being copious. After five days motors used in the somewhat mitigate the effect of this tre- mendous light but not entirely. Humming of Wires, Engineering used as support for telegraph wires in and other of the east, and St. Louis, sharply marked by bears, which, it is supposed, are misled by the humming noises to presume that there are bees within, But the humming of telephone wires is often a great nuisance to per- sons near the end of the line. The vibration is reduced so as to be inaudi- ble by means of powerful springs placed ay it may be said during the They are em- air-compres- vibrations by dampening the wires. Notes. machines and 100 | half inch behind the carbon joints. important use of on elevators, print- ing machines, and lights. Wherever a_mod- | o °Cont to her assistance. SINGULARITIES, A Pennsylvania horse has been discovered for the power fur- 1 engines. e of power through hot peanuts. A Galveston baby born a few days ago, weighed exactly one pound. Its parents are riog, offered to any one who can wear it. out to ‘consumers could produce it by | Logoing plant. state, taken as a tincture, or smoked as to- cheerful ideas. i great and positive in giving employ- capacity to their otherwise be idle | toryville "and thousands of thetn dropping out of the big swarm alighted on the boat. An infant was botn at Logan, O., on Sun- the machinery and for & right arm, ‘T left hand contains but | 1ike an echo. two flugers, which are united, and a thumb. therwise 'the itt] tion of living. U trained a pair of pet 'bears so that he them double to a bug Y ge-rl on the streets with them, scaring the orses half out of their wits, and amusing are claimed to be 25 along at a pretty fair sort of a pace. motor and power which passed directly over his head. Strange 10 say, the only injuries received were a few skin bruises. Doctors consider 1t a remark- able case. PO SRR Francesca Guthrie, the now dramatic so- | and Triboulet in prano, furnace is used for the nuv'lé\mu;:'ln Opera wmApun_viin the lr"ll week of Ootober, is & young American artist who has met with and made considerable | orse the soason le power, and the in the throat, face company. in the Past. et ana oobod A MELANCHOLY SPECTACLE, tested battles, and has won for her various districts in America are very | o Relic of the Speed Ring of the Past | the —Promising Two-Year-Olds— Flyers of the Present and Future, Fast Horses, New York World: Every day in sum- in a line, and preventing the wire from | mera gaunt, broken-spirited old horse reaching an excessive tension, especi- | may be seen jogging alon, ally in cold westher. The vibration of | turnpike between Versailles and Lex- | {5 the other two races that he lost he such lines is also reduced by hanging | ington. Ky., drawing after him an old | wag placed. From the Troubadour | making useof these sensational adjun weights upon the wires, and in that | buggy. Ho is callous to shout and whip. manner reducing the length of these | His eyes are dim, and his once glossy the beautiful orse goes gal- She was so brilliant when Inhu renowned Hindoo, prince of racers and | of 14 Polka. She was the first filly to steamed into San Diego harbor last | of stallions, after the fiercestof contests. | win“the Latonia derby, and in additio 3 she reolted Tt thuss Wednesday ovening that the startied | For the name of this shabby old dis- | o 3 D | andaho peitad il tivie:” “Alpkee, SN citizens got the impressign that she | crowned king of the turf is Checkmate, was on fire, and a number of tugs and | and his life and his present condition other vessels were hastily made ready | are an epitome of the race horse. Look at old Checkmate jogging along the Sy —— quiet country road, and glancing over brilliant racers of the past season, one cannot helni'.hinkinz thTt;hey m"clull ing with unexampled speed, be- | of them have made remariable record that will eat @ double handful of the strong- | FARDIRE W/LR 5 4 o= | of them have made remarlkable records. est Tind of cliowing tobaceo. e also has a | Fiuso “;‘“"“:‘;‘“f Jmesattdomerl i le o 3 ) remarkable appetite for bologna sausage an place, though most of them find such ploasant quarters. During the p:t:{t suu?un thur;: has been encouraged to believe it will grow up small an annual mortality of great horses, for | , i vo-eie a fe veek: or enough to cluim Mrs. Tom Thumb's diamond the two years preieediug were prolifle and his five-eighths a few weeks later . ) of wonderful performers. A weed recently discovered is called the put a memory, Hanover may never face en eaten in the green ¢ho siartor again, The Bar old ClLeckmate’s may not Tremont is is perhaps bacco, it is said t produce almost hysterical ; forever disabled, the Emporor of Nor- | Ohe statq [iaptish convontion o laughter in some cases and always results in {‘:’é{‘gé‘;i‘,fl:fi;"u:{‘flll &bhcrm:‘zo{‘llm:-ougfig to forty-two against admission, rejected fo. | compellod 10 dig his potatoes on 8 A wonderful cloud of butterflies crossed ; breds, lies buried in the uncongenial the Pawcatuck river, above Westerly, K. L, | soil of Massachusetts, a few days ago, just.as the steamer Golden | scores of rich stakes, he was killed in a | ¢ d X Star was passing above the village of Lot- | wretched little purse race; and where | 12650507 scholars. man. “And I to save mylmtnmcn,l have tbel reslhgtll}ne—’ll;roubnd\l;ur, Ben y All, Royal Arch, Ban Burg, Montana, | Catholic priest in Rome in September, 1863, o v “ day, minus legs and with only a small stump "JBL;BM? Kaloolah? The names sound | and celebrated the twenty-fifth aunivérsary | B0l to church was told by hor mam The winner of But the season in many r;:»wlpecta has | September 20. fellow is rfectly | been an exceptionally brilliant one. g 40 Lo ormed and is brifht,ud gives every indica. | Never before were the stakes so large, | of the Evancelical A A the contests so close, the betting so Colonel D. Fontain) ‘of Canton, Miss., has | high, the uncertainty so great, the | ang eighty-five churches, B BN ive- | crowds so large. There have been “(‘1) © occasionally aps | ¢hree-year-olds like and | an importa the | 0 Kingston, no two-year-olds like Tre- | mativus, ecclesiasticus et civills urbis, which | Lcnnsylvania was struck by lightuing M but there has been a general | treats of the h tho small bovs greatly. Tub bearsawmble | MORh, D T o Eanaras | aaw and specially during the reign of Greg- William Klausman, a nine-year-old New | instances the record has been touched, | 0T the Great. Thepops, it is afirmed, has | vy personal babits 1 should York boy, has the distinction of possessing | and several times it has been lowered. the hardest head known in the city. The [ New records \mvge1 l:;:ont fia{la '0:1 Io'llxr A T e R T ',‘,,‘:&"c"?;:}ogr_);{:‘,fi,, o Lol Mong;. | formal loave of is congrogation last Sundsy | by lightning 1've beon ~ afrald 10 g6 averago of fine racing. Wheeler T. ran_a mile and onc-six- | bion to East Heagal, India. Ho 18 necompa. teenth at St. Louis in 1:47}; Terra | nied by four assistants, Fathers Fovrmond, Cotta, with 124 pounds, ran one and one- | Boeres, Iisc! eighth miles at Sheepshead Bay in 1:58, San Francisco and | are four cardinals of the Roman Catholie who will be Lieard in “II Trovatore', | Richmond at Sheepshead Bay made one | chureh resideut in and “Norma" at the Grand opera house with | 4d throe-eighths miles in 2:214. Considering all things, the greatest h’ns bppl'odlm.ied success in Burope. At ono time she was en- | Firenzi, Mr. Haggin's beautiful ;‘tndu rinclx;’:l dramatic soprauo for l.l;le year-old bay filly by Glenalg, out of | metropolitan of Australia. l‘h"lll%w i-‘lorldu. She has started during the is | Carthage and primate of all Africa, and four- | Cardinal Moran, bishop of Sydney and r season sixteen times and has won nine | spectacle of the appearance, on the same red and an eye 1rritation begins that FAST FLYERS OF THE YEARI times. The last six times sho has faced { Platform and in the same cause, of two b the starter she has won. She has dem- | Man Catholic cardinals, a large number onstrated that she has all the race- },l;nlhl;"v ;‘;fl“fl:&;fi‘:,,‘:flé‘"'°|.’ the skin peals off. Dark-colored glasses | Horses That Have Made Roputations | horse qualities. She can cover dis- [ practical illustration of Christian unity was tance, carry weight and has unlimited | called out by the desire to stir up public feels speed. She has beaten the best horses | ing to the pomnt of active interference 'IQ, in the east in a number of closely con- | the slave trade in Africa. owner $28,386. She has won the great g“l”!wwd “tm‘ all c_uuu:_ll'f;n u‘l;,(-;mnow m“ Long Tsland stakes, the Average stakes lcally open to_missionaries, more g[oumou!h handicap, the Chmupion‘ less of liberty to introduce U"'m-hnlzt l: e cept Thibet. This country, with stakes, the Frochold stakes, the Mon- | Scbtthibet, his country, with 10,0065 mouth cup, and many other less notable | British and Foreign Bible society has traase events. Sho ran third in the Suburban, | lated the scriptures into the T{m.‘ In talking of the three-year-olds, fuoge, and pow has a warehouse western turfmen say: *‘Oh, yés, Kings- | Bibles printed in that tongue. ton and Hanover and The Bard wereall | A poculiar band of religious pe ple. groat horses, but if the Emperor had w":z:’g""l’:" R T ust held up!” Truly, his career was | myq Saints go through some qucer’ ilke a meteor. His last eight races | ers while holding services. One were an unbroken line of victories, and | preachers can imitate the barking of & the cawing of a crow to perfection stakes at Nashville early in_the spring | bis sermon caused two youngsters to the American derby at Chicago last George Cook and Cary Nichols to coat has been burned by the sun into a 5 terously, The boys were arrested rough brick-dust red; Vet the ol fol- summer he faced and defeated the best low sometimes pricks his ears up and The arc lamp in the St. Catherine’s | unexpectedly dashes away at full speed, lighthouse, on the Isle of Wight, is said | especially when another to be the most powerful electric light in [ loping by. On these occasions the old the world, and equal to 60,000 candles. | horse seems to remember thata fow | Balawin, The carbon pencils have a diameter of | years ago he was the pride of the two and one-half inches, and the elec- | turf, and he hears ringing in his ears | 51344 tric arc bridges a space of about one- | the hoarse shouts of the thousands when he swept under the string with every The steamer Queen of the Pacific | nerve and muscle strained to the ut- was recently fitted out with electric [ most, winning by a head, defeating the of tho three-year-olds east and west. He may never hear the drum tap again, but he deserves to be named in the first The American Israelite thinks that hél class. He is a bay colt, by Norfolk, out | a *“‘purely Aryan institution,” and that of Marian,and is owned by ‘“‘Lucky” | fore there are no Jews there. Minister—You're a nice innooen The greatest of the sound three-year- | little boy, Johuny. I'm sure you Augeles, who has a rocord | fishing Sunday. Johuny—No, sir, of ten victories out of eighteen starts, | the Mud alley boys play ball and who has won for her owner 823,052, | | In {‘;‘,""‘““!’l;l‘r one of Oul‘l‘;eu'hen‘ She is also owned by Baldwin, and'is a | her, class faithfully the golden text: chestnut filly by imported Glenely out | O thY shovs from off lil:yhf:f.‘v’}::;u rel next Sunday only one girl coul ot IMPIETIES. to that she won the Monmouth oaks, | off them shoes.” the Kansas City oaks. the Jersey handi- The Rey. Charles Hall, pastor of the cap, the Kenner stakes, the Foxhall | odist church in Livermore, Ky.. stakes, the Pocahontas stakes and a | the district conference last weok for number of handicaps. uv;flg'{ul;w m‘g;z] #he vitlags, 1t is to this year’s two-year-olds that | &% Pabdidohisc S the lovers of the sport must look for the | bicaded not guilty, and now his ut o v Kentucky is destroyed. great flyers of the coming year. Some | ~uyoung map,” said the dominie, 80 L “dow't you know the Sabbath ise In many instances the best time of the | rest? “Yes, I kaow,” repli year has been made by two-year-olds, | vedge, ‘‘but since the old man stopped a8 notably Proctor Knott's junior cham- | tising I restall the week aund I've gob pionship time of 1:14, Galen’s haif mile | ercisc when 'l get a chance,” L over the Washington park track in 0:48 Willie,” said the Sunday-schX “you may tell me why Noah into the ark. *“Can’t, ma’sm.” “Whj lie, you ought to be able to guess t ber there was a great flood co know now.” “Well, why was it & body had borrowed Lis umbrella.” “What," said a priest to a laborer who Wi in 1:014, The state Bantist convention of Louisiana, ty-four for male delogates, “do )'Dll’.sx)‘?ll\lur this Jproper work : Recent roports of the International Sup- | Sabbatht” FWell, Mr. Priest, do you Bob &4 day schiool union show that thore are 1,504,- | O, Sunday ! sald the wageish nelghBeR Sunday school teachers in the world and | But I dis to save souls," 1oplied the rchbiahon Crrvigan was_ordainod as_ | BY DoV FoRtin o barguin - {a Ve a be suve to remember the text, which ol of his ordination at the cathedral,New York, to be: “Why halt ve betwoen two of On her return mamma said: *“Loul hope you remember the texti” when ropiied: “I dida't exactly catch minister said, but it was somethiag hawlk between two pigeons.’ " According to the statistical report for 1883 tion, just pub- an Methodists has tincrant proachers, lished, that body of G 141,553 members, 1,15 “Absalom," remarked Mrs. Rainbo, %I by the papers that a tobacco wi Leo XIII, has authorized the publication of historical work, Codex aiplo- istory of Romo in the mudlo | [rd4y, tnd the same thing happoged 40 not more accidents, Absalom, and if I ba“in to ?orim'utly x?l'n{mflmfi“'"x “How can orm §" s 3 chureh at South Bend, Ind., took llgfil::ug ‘;:rm,n:r Mo:‘dyo'u zh\.«l:lxl:‘i‘:l“ rovised the proofs. it Rev, Father Fallize, of St. Josaph's Catho- ic rior t) his departurc on an important mis- | ghurch,” e — e “I believe in protection for Am dustry,” sald the try . *“Therefore, ish history there | of foreign descent, 1 have concluded compote with the protected laborers land. Give me 8 dime, mister, a agree Lo refrain from work snother At s If your complaint is want of For the first time in En ngland. dinal Manning, archbishop of Westminster ; Cardinal Howard, now lying iil at Norfolk house; Cardinal Lavegerie, archbishop of London has lately seen the extraordinary | Sons, sole manulacturers, A $5.00 Beaver Shawl which we sell for $3.85; it is full size 72x72, and revese i At the great London mission conference i§ try half wine glass Angosti 3itoes b ]