Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 21, 1888, Page 9

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PART 1. PAGES {)-16 i E](ill'l'iflliN’l’H YEAR. . BENNISON BROTHERS, GREAT UNLOADING SALRD '} our stock is too large and we mustunload. We will offer special inducements next week in every department. Our great special sale injCar- i))[AH/\. SUNDAY MORNING, 0(‘7[;0‘]“2[{ 21, 1888,--SIXTEEN PAGE Il NUMBER 12 pets ,0il Cloth, Curtains, Shades, etc., is still continued. Now is the time to buy Carpets, Curtains, Rugs, Oil Cloths, etc., at less than wholesale prices. We can and will save you money, if you will give us half a chance. Don't forget our Cloak Sale next week, at the lowest prices ever quoted for good goods in Omaha. { ““agc. eI Cinfys fuck Toweing Pl Sy Plush Jackets, Pk gt Hamels By . j | . 8.90 | 5 pieces Surah Silks 21 different . Monday only, 10 picces German 6-07. { shades. Thisisalot we closed ont at pink mix Flannels, worth 25c yard, On { very low fignresand atthe price quoted o 48 Ladies' Seal Plush Jackets, satin - sale Monday 14e yard. v #2¢. is indced®a great bargain, This L] This - L] L} lined. rment i8 «old in Omaha o is for Monday onl picces fine French Corduroys. This 150 Ladies’ Seal Plush Sneques42 inch | 48 high as $16.00. - Our price, one weck, | beautiful | yric. The col- long, quilted, satin lined, Chemois skin | $:90- ] orings and wes the very latest pockets, 4 seal ornaments; for one week \ | = DRESS PLUSHES i «ame quality is sold in New York this gariment $28.90, worth 35, {200 fine 1 Our price next week is 1 5 20 picces fine Silk Dress Plushes they would be cheap at 820 yard, — We 100 dozen Ladics’ fine Linen Hand- are anxious to unload, conscquently the kerehiefs, in plain white, with drawn prico hus hon made 81,50 @ yard for a A stiteh, faney scolloped cdges, colored thort time | J y embroidered: none worth less than 40¢ er Shawls, reversable in Mail orders Filled. |[adies Handkerchiefs e oy i i e wert Ay go for one week at $2 COMFORTERS ! COMFORTERS ! $1.90. 5 bales fine Comforters, the best in town at the price worth §2.25; our price only $1.50 ach, ‘ tos0c. Your choice Monday 2 3 1 cate Monday, of fine Huck Towelin . 1/ just to get a crowd, s%c¢ yard. . " - 2C ina’ 3 / This is the greatest bargain ever of- ‘\ I 'I' k R d 42-inch long. extra 1 60 picces fine Dress Flannels, full en rew l" ev e ) ed in Omah ted lining. 4 seal or- yard and half wide, in all new and ity. satin q naments. This wrap has sold all the staple shades. The |“.,.m S0, You o I 5§ hRE season at #40 and is good value at that Stithes et s s price, but we have 06 many and must week at 624e yard L unload. one weelk only at $20.80. 35C Mail Orders Filled. . 8.000 yards Remnant Renfrew Turkey "able Damasks 2 to 8 yard | NSCs full Standard Prints, Monday 4 yard. ach, Embrmdgfadg Flannels, FLOOR OIL i BC. ol CEODHS Flannels, at 49. Who ever heard of embroidered Nanncls at 4% yard. LADIES 1 VESTS, 37/20 358. [ ] } picces fine -.u-}u Dress € \m?q‘ only ik ity Blosh and { uey plaids, beautiful stripes, polka 50 dozen Ladies' Jersey Ribbed all | fine saver Cuffsand Collar, is good 75 dozen Ladies’ Jersey Ribbed Vest Monday only 45 picces 40-inch Tricots . &e. These goods are really worth | 20 €ozeh Lacies .ersey o value o ¢ v (cozon cingiesiiforiay itibbec Vosis, 2 tnlgreys g and browns, Thoy ire 81,60 yurd, bile we Are aux1ous 10 raduce """"‘ Yeutshighinock ongisles vlue abe05; ou peflieely SuRe: Bon o, :”“}‘ ock N “‘,"“‘"‘- They were | 20 picces Floor Oil Cloths nevef sold rth 50c and we will seli them one day our diess stock and will let them out for | 11¢ folors of the rainbow. 18 i i 1,000 Ladies’ Blg re Mufls, Mon- | made to at whe, but our unloading | jess than 50c¢; our price is only Boe | Nonay st for fun ut e yurd. " | oue weck only at bbe yard. o O | worth$L.50; our price next week # Mail Orders Filled. |, " e st el price is 87c ench, i ! ! Bennison Bros Bennison BrosBennison Bros |Bennison Bros [Bennison Bros 01; '“)A‘ESF VE“SP'XP“RS nese newspaper,” was the reply, *“‘are never | along with a bundle of newspapers sticking | to (;x[lrcun !l‘m\'r i.l;n-. Lnr l:wr{o 1(? no »:mm ?m no MIY‘”WN too high or abtruse for them. \ Al'L 5 S sts of their gowns. They | in-Japan, and the handkerchicfs the natives | Inone of the book stores here there is as JAFAA 4 1 LRG| I SO 0‘}r"“’"“"-‘];“}";fi“ ts which covers nearly the | use are of paper. I have been Interviewed good a collection of metaphysical works as are men of straw, whom we employ for this | ) 510 o their faces, and the calves of their | a number of tho reporters, and my talks have | you will find in any book store in Washing purpose. They get from 2010 §30 & month | Jordara bare, You het there their | furnished several columns of printed hicro- | ton, and Mill and Spencer are re. salaries and they act as proof readers or | bells tinkling, and wh re is 4 bell | glyphics and a section of a Japanese paper | thousands. All classes of scl e Beninison Bros|Bennison Bros ard signed by them lo nd published in the | Omaha's Pacific Railway Argonaut, il newspaper. This is real gratitude. A Canton, O., couple eloped in a milk wigon. It wus owned by the groom, a pros- perous dairyman, T wealthy fam S BREACH OF TRUST. CoNTiINeNTAL Hoter, Nuw York Ciiv, girl belongs to u | Citizen old friend B. Roscieater, and had been ke d by the ntific works How They Manage to Sell 60,000, HOMANA Bi ping com Ldito local reporters. We have, you know, a rigid | there is always a newspaper iere is no | would make & very interesting American | are sold and there seems to be more | puny® for seviral years against hor father's | Rail times again are out of ot 000 Coples & Year. ‘_““w_\’w‘_! ek e fm news stauds on the strects and the papers | newspaper illustration. solid books than novels, I see second- | wiel ¥ & Wl ume ]\".'“p“"‘_')f”i pIBE —_— are not sold in_ the hotels, Therearea few | The chouper papers of Japan run largely | hand books for sale on the strect : 3 per publishes anything offensive o the KOV- | gtyeot sales of papers und the most of the | to wood cuts, and they publish great pictures | marked here and there with Japanese notes CURIOUS THINGS IN NEWSPAPERS | crument its editors and publishers are lable | copics go to subscribers. The presses used | of the most harrowing scenes. — In one you | bearing on such subjects as biology, political to be fined, imprisoned or banished. When | in the Niehi Nichi Shimbun offico uro { may ace o murdor portrayed. in whicl an | economy and history, and a’ mumitier of the * 4 s st R e A Ga C o straw ed. | 0ld fashioned ones of America make. The | almond-eyed girl is killed by an almond-cyed | more noted works have been translated into | NCIFess. noC o T : e The Straw Editors Willing to Be | 8V .n is l.h ¢ th ;\m!m.«v of u‘..:" _1:4\\ ed stereotyping is done after the American | villmn. In another is 8 love scene, and ina | the Japanese language. Mr. Mutza, the l\l\l_‘;lfld:l}.l%ull lvn v 1"",'.' Wash m_n{m.:_n'umu} l{‘\hll(\v.;:{ »lnl\lll’\.x..)/\Hll\.n{,.‘l:tn ir rl,;,'ml:ni . Jailed for $20 a Month—Wages itorsare sent i and they undergo the pun- | by 55k plates are trimmed down with | third o story of Japgnese sorrow, and death | present minister from Japan to America, Vst s b R b L e Bl sl Bl ol el e o ishmont. Of course we pay their salaries | hahd suw which, looks like o butcher knife | is told in pen and ik thiat seom to weep. In | imused himslf durin o ‘political. imprison: | 1m0 Tasior showd his certificate of owner | As vou wore with e at the tine ~Ilustrations—Reporters while they are in prison, but the whole thing | flled into tecth, After this they aro planed | all of theso the Japanese dress and features | ment, which he underwent several years ago | With 1 REomiSd to Kaen hor o kol vange, |, (VL DO Bete Budnoer). | 0L R an0ataDasile: T e iy with a common carpenter’s plane and when I | are carried out, and the illustration is on the | by translating Beutham's Spirit. of the laws | Vi PIGuY of feed. ' The paternal viessing b cheat the town as **Bunko Steer (! he editors’ names do not hence appear on | Visited the stercotyping department and | whole about as good as that you find in the | into Japan. and I amsurprised at the num- : ¥ 3 Buck Taylor, king of the cowboys in Buf ) As I arranged with Lincoln then, falo Bill's Wild West combination, lariated | (At Omaha) Initial Point. the affections of a Baltimore béauty and [ Strange times arc these when Theft eucceeds, heiress. He rounded her up and had his | When Corporations rob « towns, 5 o looked at the light attire of the workers who | American newspapers. ber of public men I meet who are eood lin- | The first romantic marriage of the scason ?\"Lf»‘i-’.‘-(.\r\ SAtARe and diADderean, Tokio, Japan, Oct. 5.—[Special | the editorial page, and they are in the 1ast | \vurg clad in nothing but breech clothes, the COST OP DAILIES. ¢ guists. Calling upon the vice minister of I September 17 last, in Jeffersonville, | Who reprosonted Omana, | Correspondence. of Tur Bre) 1t | column and last line of the newspaper. They | editor Japanese newspapers aro cheap. The best | war this morning without my interpreter 1 fiss Minnie L. daughter: of || Drow Un sontract (us logal fao I i 2 stand at the end after the advertisements. “‘Excuse these men, It1sso warm, They | dailies cost 30 cents @ thonth or a centand 4 | was asked if I could speak Freneh or Ger- amuel € A of the Bank e ooy ‘\l;u“v is only eighteen years since the | w10 wino the editorinls come the tolegrams | are naked.” half acopy. * Tho pavers do not make much | man as he found the Enghish very hard for | of Commerce, was marricl to Mr. R 8. | Two Hundred Thousand Dollar sum first newspaper was published in | oo e s Mhose are mixed together, THE SANCTUM, still they “have great influence. I | him. I replied mn German and our conversa- | Willis, of Galveston, Tex. Although the o b B e Jopan. Still 61,000,000 copies of 2E3 158010 S ) It takes about one hundred and fifty men | was told by one of the men conn with [ tion was then conducted in that language. 1| Youug couple were known to be e d A i B qarranagosun: el and there are a number of columns of them. | o rup the Nichi Nichi Shimbun office, and | the government that the newspapers could | meet many Japanese who can talk English | their marriag 28 in the nature of a sur- | | Alviu Suunders w: X , newspapers were sold in 1884, and | ppen comes the foreign news, and then cor- | the editorial rooms contain many low tables, | overthrow a public man or minister in Jupan, | and the day will come when the English will | Prise to their friends, Mr. Willis i3 at col ST ragt iy molior o ehh OETIAnET A cith U. P, the increase of 1879 was double | respondence and letters of tray The editos ach of Trust rests with U. T in-chief in Javanese dress intro- | aud public opinion seems to h Tex., und Miss Cisseday con. I'he Br -man | lege in W as mucii | pe as familiar a language here as the that of 1830, At present Japan has AT me to a score and more of brown- | weight here as it has in America. 1find | is in America Fit R tinues her studics at senool in Louisvi CILOF PIOMI=E TULOUGIL EALSE ik 575 daily and weckly newspapers, | The newspaper contents of the large daily itlemen in Japanese gowns who | the newspaper men of Japan to be very e American girls who desire to marey titled | THE grounds are worth One Million no R UL 3 BROES, he newspaper: contents of the large daily | oo, 504 writing up and _down sheets of rice | bright men, and in fact there is no class of T 2 Europeans should not. neglect their French, | (hliree hundred thousand intevest) | and its dailis number ninety- | paper here are much the same as at home. | papar with camel’s hair brushes as I entered. | subjects which they do not discuss, Their SINGULARITI ix Minister Lothrops. daughter. who mar. | il denot or stamp on Board Press seven. It publishes thivty-five law | The Nichi Nichi Shimbun or Tokio Daily | Tea was brought in in little cups holding as | editorial articles, gomprise finance, com- ried @ Russiun baron a fow days ago, was [ o Pishonor? as its Railway guest, magazines and 111 scientific period- | News, which lies before me as I write, has | much us you could put in the smallest cgg | merce, christianity and the thousand and | A harless cat excltes the wonder of Par- | courted in French, because she could not e Dok e S cight pages. 1t has market reports, giving | CUP- A cigarette was offered me and aboxof | one new subjects whi¢h are now interesting | sons, Kan. It was born in that condition, k Russian, and her was unskilled | ¢ IX e e o DeEy: icals, It has thirty-five medical | eight pag A% TTKES POPOTES, BIWINE | charcoal put beside me to lightit, ~ We | old Japan. and promises to liv nglish. Miss Vieginia Knox, of Pitts S oL aarg Saale journals and an equal number of | therise and fall of the stock mar It | chutted for some time though the | ‘The papers are taken by all classes of peo- A Jersey cow in Atchison, Kan., is the who married Count di Montercol (In Omaha National Bank) Is Honor Bright Omaha Waif ¢ President was 10 boodle crank. rles Francis Adams and Juy Gould Were then not known in U, 1%, 1 How then can they swear to deed shame 1e Snealc Thicf Robber hus Rail Pooled § 1« Did not Thurston State Board create 24,000,000 Ty been contributed 1o | 1 Uy 1% orders Can Adas s 000000 s, heen coatribited 1 | "'1g hina not glven Town aw cun' board in tho last sovonty-cight { g i3a0m Ring Mools elsewhore in statel religious newspapers. Its people | Fecords the mails and the steamers due. The | editor, who spoke read cight different story papers, | Market prices fill several columns, and it has | changes in newspaper wo nglish on the | ple, from the mikado to the cooley and the | proud parent of triplets, all alive and doing woing on over | number of subscribers increases cvery day, | well. She deserves a pension. i and the count couldn’t two pages of advertising. Its editor tells | the world. 1 found my remarks publishea in | Tokio hus a press club which meets onco a | An esthetic-looking blue lobster with a del- | count on his English, French thus became hat rdeath notives e maid. for and 1| the newspaper the next morning and I wish | month and which frequently entertaing for- | jcately tinted piuk tail was captured at Port- | the language of st resc aen PR¢ 1 A1 1 could give your readers here @ quotation | eign visitors. There are three land, Me., recently, is now swimming in close - - that these are bovdered with black. | from them. It all looks the same to e, how ENGLISH PAPERS 5 quarters as a curiosity. i RELIC Nich ehi- Shuimbun is tho oldest | ever, and I would be s liable to clip'aseo. | published in Japan, They are all issued at | "% 0000 G ite wings was seen in R T tion of n lovo story as of my _ interview, had | Yokohuma, and ‘their prices form quite a | A SPATTOW with white wings was socn in vars ago and the first I not my guide to hielp me. ~ As we talied the | contrast with those of the Japancse news: | gy grmy'of nearly one hundred brown spar 958 RE0. L reporters worked busily in thenext | papers. They cost 20 gents or from $18 to § ‘ A s experience, She was ur Ch and 102 papers cater to the agricul tural, commercial and industrial classes. It has its Punch or Puck, 3 and this is tilled with cartoons and witticisms, taking off the public men of the Mikado ewpire just as Puck and Judge do S W#rdg About the Ame cighteen ) sk s R s e L ! usil the next Ehay cost %0 canta 810825 | rows for several hours. When the “curio” g ; Why should our Omahn be sold those of our republic. Al these papers are | Lo ) : ! ¢ from @ room and I saw the exchange cditor n a blue | i year, aud the news in them is almost en- | 4yihiaq the others would T ry city and villace in the cighteen prov- | mo s Tandred Mo B il bl ¢ oad Ly | Plock. T looked at some of the earlier vol- | dressing gown clipping_and marking with | tirely Japauese and of other foreign coun- | {%HeF the others would ul eht line, oF OkInn Are Row Onen 1o tho miselon aanHund Fre ‘ published in Japanese. Thoy read DY) uies to-day. The pages wore then no larger | his red ink and brush articles intended for | tries rather than America. One of these is | gy GO AT0TLOE PO R & SEEAIENY RS | o l0l 0F the cross. ALTrRoURY Aangeesamiifos Heocle Cold, the natives of the country, and the work | g fICAE: TR bar S cero | the chief editor's cye. On the same fioor | before me and its American news is com ¥ f ollawranty, tiigey A g Aud Omahia “Way Station” st A on them s dono entiroly by native labor, | (RAR & sheot of foolscap vapor. b t to th alroom’ T heard | prised in the following telegram: ing always, however, at a most respectful | Bob Burdette, the genial, laaghter-making [ © We've waited Five and Twenty Years upon them is done entirely by native labor. | jrinted on rice paper and only one side or | 4nd it to the o al roo i d @ follos ) distance." humorist, has been liceused us an welist [ To lose “Initinl P ' 3 Tt Ao the outk it 0 of | ¢ of many feet vas 1old the | | *“WasmiNGTox,D. Co—The house has passed . b lose *Initiul Point” at las They are the outgrowth of the new civiliza- | 4o juper was printed. It was for years the | Lgersmb of many feet, and I was LA A v he famous toad which was dug out alive | And is to Start out on a campuign against sin. (Through Senates, Pool Room, Bunke tion and they ure the great educators of the | .oyt paper and received u large sum per COMPOSING ROOM ‘The Japan Mail is perhaps the best known | from a stratum of Scotch clay at Hartford, | Mra. Hooth-Tucker, daughterof “Genoral” | | = Steors), ’ people, wouth from the governunent. It then snoesed | and that it was made by the dozen boys who | of tho English Japuncse hewspapers. 1t | Gonn, belonging to the glacial period dicd at | Bootis, commander of the Salvation ar With Cujon ! balfmast, \ JAPANESE NEWSPAPER e wetameny, L then snceiad | ere gathoring type for the compositors. 1 | dited by Captain Brinkley, an Englisbman, | the end of three days, A local surgeon cut a | recently started for Tndia with a company of | Push a Pr through Tuk Br), looks strange to foreign eyes. 1f one could dent and 1ts o editor. Mr. St is ong | 1o0ked in. The ‘type was arranced in long | Who has been iu Japan for a score or more of shit across the membrane which closod the | Aty missionary officers When - urty Rings and Pools” connive, take about 1,000,000 teabox letters and put | by poo et Fiban k © | cases standing on the floor propped against | years and who is one offthe finest scholars as | toad’s mouth in or eed it, and the poor | Twenty-nine years ago the Presbyterian Riiar La the brightest of newspaper managers. | each other at an angie of forty-five degrees Just returned frow traveling in Europe, he | in the shape of a tent. These Cases wer chian had not enough vitalily to bear | mission in Brazil was begun. There is now | Hold Records inour Memory, el as one of the most influential foreigners ation. Much interest is manifested | a presbytery of fifty churchesand thirty-two Grorar FRaxers Tra six | in Japan. them in six-inch rows up and down four or eight pages about half the size of this news. | ¢ glish flueatly and when [ met him [ fect high —and from fifty to sixty | I noteinoneof the Japanese newspapers | In the towd, which has been preserved in al- | miisters. “Twelve of the latter arc uatives ————— vaper he might get some idea of the general | o'y dinner the other night he gave me o | 160 long, and they were packed | of alate dute announcig its collections for | coholin nock museum, In northern Mexico new churches have PEPPERMINT DROPS, appearance of the paper. If he could know | .o » ®1with type in compartments ke | the suffercrs from recent eruption of Mr. Cyrenius Hall, the artist, has a sum- | been organized, and at places visited for the —_— Al i hasurh casnted a | 20ral invitation to visit his ofice. those of an Americs ess room. Bandisan, in which 80:many villages were | mer home at Isle of Hope in Mame. Three [ first time large audiences have listened with | The most mantlo of charity Is 10! 4. ND0e0. 1040F o THE WORKING FORCE. priuters do not sel s “type as with us. [ destroyed, that tha papers collcct coutribu- | weeks ago Mrs. Hall, to encourage her hens | inarked attention to the words of the mis- | made of scals b4 whole word and that half a dozen of them - The Nichi Nich Shimbun ofice islocated in | The words of an article hered before | tions nere as they’de W America, and this | to lay, bought a half-dozen china nest eggs | sionary. 1 s e, | they begin to put it together for the paper. | paper states that Within s fortnight after this | ana placed them in their nests. On look made a sentence he n it 1 to his concep. The railvoad with the n the heurt of Tokio. lmagine @ ¢ £ | The corner stone of a home for & : owest gaVEQ ) tiou, His picture, however, would bo fur | srers mne ot akile 8 large The type or words, for each type represents | eruption 3, 700 was thus.collectea for them a few days after they were not to | i {orner stone of a lome for most frequently has the largest mort kage e A e M Sy _ s E ¢ structure ) Ereat columns | g yword are brought in little boxes like cigar THE COMINGELANGUAGE. be found, nor were there are any sugar. i . s Sy K v, the motor mau, has been cauced from a true one. ‘The Japaucse papers are | wupning around its front and side and with s There ver i asets abe phia, Tuis ap upususi institation, for voey 1 Syl B S Sl 2 @ > : boxes, arranged in the order in which it isto [ There is 4 movemeht going o in Japan | bowls of teasets about to show that the | fiidy LIS, 4o wuusiel institytion, for vees | oongigerdbic annoyance by’ his mother-in-law, the direct opposite of ¢ flat, overhanging roof covering its two stories, | o into the paper, and the compositor sets it | for the throwing away of Chincse characters | china eggs had hatched. The disappear Q0 dblenta ot CHat(Taa I'he song of the girl and the kerosene can run from right to left across the puge in- | and you have the exterior of the building' | up in his composing stick. It thus takes | aud the adoption of the samo aiphabt that | of the ekes was a mystery until one day last | “O/C 0bJccts of charity. N ~+Oil away, o the promiscd land." stead of upand down it, and the lines are | The counting rooms, press rooms and stereo- | much leg work to get up a Japanese newspa- | we use, There are two societies in Tokio in | week @ chicken snake ‘was killed on Mr, [ Kev: George McC. Fiske, of Providence, | ™ 50 AW 00 country is yet perpendicular instead of horizoutal. You | Lyping foundry areon the ground foor, and | per, and these boys have to run from one | favor of some reform in this direction, and | Hall's farm, and two china eggs were found | K 1y rositively doclines to accept the bish- | Creqn (8 INEGCE BAE UAC CORREEY, 18 Vel begin at the top of & line to read iustead of | Ui° edltorial and cowposiug roows on the | end of the room to the other many times to | one of them wanta te adept the Japanese al | inside of it.’ * His snakeship iad been doubt- | OPrie Of Fond du Lac, to which e was re- | S 3 gl L 8 floor abe Entering the counting room you | get the different ones of the five thousand | phabet proper, which vousists of forty-seven | less suffering from dyspepsia for several | Contly elected. "It is announced that another 2 - \ atthe side, and when you have read about | fingd about two score of men in gowns sitiing | characters which go to make up the Japanese There will probably bo a change to | weelks, election will be hield in November. It is doubt dison’s new talking-mae six inches of these ideographic characters you | behind lattice-vork screens before little | vocabulary of letters. stem or the other, and I have heard it seculiar phenomenon has been discov- | Grand Rabbi Isidore, the most distin- | chine will ever supersedo the old reliable come to the column line and go back {0 the . Fach “has a paint brush in [ Compositors are paid from $10 to ¢30a | predicted that English will eventually be the | ere In Taurens orunin e, o (oentiscov: | guished Jew i France, is dead at Paris, | Sewing societics top aud read down again, The columns arc | his hand and a book of rice paper [ month, and it will be interesting here to give | language of Japn. ST atha A SRR Bl D0 S0 ice 135, He was a liberal Hebrew, and did \d men are said tp twice as wi L AL som | Defore him. These are the bookkecpers | the salaries of the men emploved on a Japa- | I saw a short-hand writer in one of the of. 28 in extent has apparently dropped about | DOt discourage wixed ma He posthumously abthe © a8 Wwide as ours and thoy do not seem | o *fho" asablishnient, and it is bere | ness newspaper. - The editor in-chiol re. | fices huro tako down Japun conversation, und | 4cresin extent has apparently dropped about | urzeq the observance of bigh morality to have the flaming headlines that prevail in | that the advertisers come. About three- | ceives §150 a moath, and the other men con- | I could sce that his pothooks looked any dif. | fou’, foet below the surface of the surround: | han the rites of the church, 1% begun 10 drop. Tt's American nowspapers. The periods, mstead | fourths of the advertisements of the paper | nected with the editorial room range from | fereut from those of the revorters of con. | \why Juery, hhe sunken grouad is covered | g CSnueeons chureh in London —the , the drop may well be of being dots, ave circles as big round as u | come nnun!u'm:l. the rest is mnho;r d on | ;rm down to 40 a month. Reporters receive | gross. It will be limpmnblc‘ Liow for | congiderably. Near the edge of the fallea | churchof the great tabe ¢ —is now, in ' an3 thano’ ave 16 aun e commission. Advertising rates are low and | from §15 to 320 a month, aud foreign corre- | Japan ever to use the type-writer whiie she [ it rge crack, dxtending toward the | the most absolute sense, independ It 19 contrivance whe e e e 1o such things s capitals, | i)y paper charges only 7 conts a line, Twen- | spoudents get about §60'a month. sticks to the Chinese characters. In the | Minee 1* f Jar€® crack sxtonding toward the | )5 0 connection with any uion ia k “Can drop & 06at in P lewspaper oftice uses 5,000 | ty.five words make a line in these Japancse ILLUSTRATIONS. meantime a large part of the empire is learn SO 100 Apesitre o ovater | {ion, convocation, or any ecclesiastical court slot and characters and these are a mixture of Jupan- | papers und this would be decidedly chep ior | The leading papers of Japan use illustra- | ing English, and Japan has the best | 403 sand issuc contiaually. This water has | (7 U8 Gt Fon O Qe GECe LTS GO BT AL o ese and Chinose. the New York World, whichi 18 to our me. | tions.only when tho occasion demands it. [ educational 'system’ ‘of ~any of the | f miky seduncut and.as it rans down @ | L0 G0M s to Mr. Spurgeon's norposes i 3 ow we aro. kald thét the. eolopiam THE MAKE-UP, tropolis what the Nichi' Nichi Shimbun is to | They publish victures of noted men as they | oriental nations. School attendance is ation it comes” plow: v Joatroys all | relution to the future of his church, but he WE 13 greaninoks is deadly. palecs. "SRG The first partof a Japanese journal is made | 7OKio. Mr. Seki tells me that the Japanese | become promivent, and when the late uomi- | compulsory and taere are 000,00 ¢ sulphurous odor pervades the airof | a8 given no sign, und if the question has G s ¥ ofioint b Al is ma have not becn fully educated in the use of | nating conventions were held the American | children in the public schools. More than | g 0¥ S oE ¢ BIFOL 1 Ween discussed in the meetings ot his elders b0l for servants is in operae up of oficial notiticatious and official reports. | udvertising, but that the newspaper advertis- | legation here was besieged with reporters | oue million of these are females and Japan chdoctos they have been discreetly silent If the girls are good-look- Then comes the contents of the paper and | ing increascs from year to year. The news. | who wanted photographs of Thurman and | bas 142 high schools, 1t has sixty-tive normal 1t comes as church news from England that | [ they cannot flud employment. 15 will ba directly aftor this the cdiorwls. ‘This | Papers advertise their own circulat Cleveland and of Harrison aud Morton, They | schools and there wre about 1,%0 pupils in the the bishop of Ely will hereafter license his | V381€ 0f timo to teach them. part,” said one of the leading editors, as he [ C8¢h boasts thatit hasthe biggest found out that Mr. Dunu, one of the secre. | imperial university here. Thore are 103 tech . deuco only one original sermon a | Al the Sioux chiefs at Washington have pointed to the hic ybhics - composing it put up bulletin boards, but they do not tavies of the legation, was a cousin of Sena- | nical schools containivg 8,000 students, and (Neb.) man bas married after round that & soung man just | €018 in the head. It is evident that the mye hiaied ¢ &Ly h & it | The papers on the streots. tor Thurman, and they wanted as full & re- | 1303 schools are maintaitied by private funds, | twenty years of courtship conducted through | et i ipa T inistry cannot with justice to | C0US membrane of the redskin is becoming t Is the brains of the paper, and the press is THE NEWSBOYS port about him as would be required from a | The future of Jupau it is impossible to pre. | the wails himself or the subject prepare more than very seusitive to the customs of civillzatioh | ® great maker of public opinion and a strong | The newsboys of Japan are hired by the | gossippy American correspondent. The red | dict, save that with this system of education, The approaching marriage of Boulunger's | serman o sk Ao threbartumdis than o “What Frenchman's dramatic works are factor in governmental matters in Japan.” - | month, und_§10 a month is good wages. | bandana handkerchief puzzled them, and | it can not but continue to advance daughter, Mile. Marcelle, with Capt. Derant, as they il hear two | the most popular with Amsrican audiences f | be the gaine are Mothing like the newsboys of | their version of “But where are the editors' vames " said I, | A" enator Thurman's snuff- | A o0k @t the book stores of T i skio gives | is oMcially aunounced 000 sermons » week, ons arigi 4 cne | mquires @ correspondent. That dependg - Awerica. The sign of the calling is & sort | taking were as varied as their characters, 1 | some id - ; . K > o 008 8rig §:a80 | O t X “The iames o al editors’ of & Ja X ome idea of the elass of literature that the | A newly married Aroostook pair return | seloctec i Vo poor sl ser- | Sardou and Worth: both claim the champiol The liames of the real editors of & Jupn- | of a sueep bell Which tinkles us they trov l doubt wot that new chiaracters were uvented | educated peopie of the cwpire read, aud there | thauks (0r their many elegant p’:;eu\sm B A, oA OL KNG DOUIRHFILN: A8 X ship beit, )

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