Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 28, 1888, Page 5

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1888--SIXTEEN PAGES. S —===N. B. FALCONER= Times are hard. Look at these prices for Monday. We are getting goods at our own prices in New York and we are giving you the advantage. All wool French Dress Goods $1.25 down to 49c. $1.25 Broadcloth down to g8c. $1.00 Eiderdown Flannel 49c. 6oc Jersey fitting Vests down to 33%c. ;5c stainless black Hose down to 45c. 2.00 White Blankets, for t?:.zg, and so on. Full particulars underneat ome and see that these extraordinary prices, as usual, are real. 44-inch French Fancy weaves, all the new shades, 49c¢; reduced from $1.25. 54-inch Broadcloth, 98c. Warranted steam shrunk; all the latest shades. Reduced from $1.25. BL AGK GOODS_-M-mch Camel’s Hair Suitings. We have about 10 pieces of B. Priestloy & Co’s. Black Camel’s Hair Dress Goods which we will offer on Monday,at 95¢ per yard. They were bought to sell at $1.50 and $1.75. Monday's price 95¢. SALE OF BIL.ANKETS Monday morning we start one of our big blanket sales. This will be a memorable one in the blanket trade, as we intend to close out three cases of slightly soiled blankets at two-thirds of actual cost to us. Fine new blankets, in white. scarlet and gray, at wholesale prices for one week commencing Monday. See our show windows, examine our stock, and you will be convinced that we have the finest housekeeping department in the west. SPECIAL =—— 1 case slightly soiled 10-4 white wool blankets at $1.29 reduced from $2.00. 1 case of slightly soiled 10-4 white blankets at $1.89, reduced from $3.00. 1 case slightly soiled 10-4 white wool blankets at $2.89, reduced from $4 0O. 100 dozen ladies’ fine merino jersey fitting vests, high neck and long sleeves,worth 60c; to close this lot we will offer them at 33!;¢ Monday., “Onyx Stainless” black cotton hose at 45¢, worth 75c. 4-4 Eiderdown flannel at 49c¢. 15 pieces plain and fancy Eiderdown Flannel worth $1.00, Monday's price 49c. COME AND SEE SHOW WINDOW FLAGS! m FLAGS! m FLAGS! We call attention to parties decorating for the opening of the new bridge to our large stock of . flags, in all sizes, at very low prices. N. B. FALCONER. 3 STATE BAPTIST CON ENTION‘ ward, will pay cash in hand to J. D. McFar- | saloon: a throne at one end, with a small —.——g——_——————————_———————-————“_—m . 'I‘HE PATH“{AY OF ’I‘HE STORM cords of two or three hundred stations | the war there sprung up a practice of 7 ; ; it shows the directi IanaliaasontoWhodomRoeany of SHoRi ol | ab bitoronmsmoking in {chub 0T it 0 bo of any value for comparison, should | setting aside a part of tho army appro- | and the figures . just" aboee " m hundred others,” joining in lhel"llmlh\w" Leopold IL, king of the Belgians, has no be made under similar conditions.” priation for weather observations, for | the record of the Baromet Th agawnst the payment of the levy of the storm | ear for music, but is a great admirer of good The interviewer interposed a confes- | the beuefit of commerce and nzrfcul- Sl oo ter district No. 1 to prove that I have in | pj 3 5 l i A LK dotted lines ave isotherms, and Y manner, divectly o Medirectly, recowved | porures snd possessos u fine collostion. 'He | How 1t is Outlined by tho Signal | sion, but admitted his ownorship of an | ture. I think the records will show that bR The Sessions to Commence In Lin- ! 1 v h { hat | one you see that it was as warm in Ootober 20. a cent or furnished any material, or in any | Mme. de Pompadour. Accessible to callers, Service. understanding with a tone that was as | General Sherman objected to the divi- | tana yesterday as in Omahe. 'IP::: coln on Ootober 20. manner derived any benefit in money or | King Leopold can converse with them in good as a question hook. sion—or the subtraction, if you will. | black lines that sweep across the couns otherwise from the contractors of the dis- | French, German, Euglish and Flemish, Re- j i “Our thermometers are upon the | A set of instruments—such as they had trict storm water No. 1. I mean in cash the HOW DEDUCTIONS ARE MADE. | roof. They are inclosed by double lat- [ in those days—were sent to various mil- tice work, which shields them from the | itary stations,and an officer at each sun but allows a free circulation of air. | was assigned to make observations. The Instruments Whioch Record the | Up there we escape the radiation and [ Their attention was irregular and their i e markably affable as a general rule, be can be above amount, This is not wind. decidedly emphatic when he is vexed. Dur- _ Hexry Deax, ing his long reign Leopold has never signed Office 237 North Tenth street. | a death warrant. : TRICKS OF TIE TRADE. s It is reliably stated this morning that bogus Emparor William, of Germany, goos about ;.r_\' in(grcn}tl loops are isobars. The : NERVE. barometers show the same pressure A WOMAN'S WONDERFUL all points along any given isobar. R.‘: in the middle of these big loops is Arrangements Completed For the e ) i B area of lowest pressure, and in this case \ i M A Y Action of the Elements and reflection. I have known forty feetin | records are of little virtue. Gen- | it is so well del "" Court House Cornerstone Cere- republican election tickets are being cir- E,‘\',f.‘:,“f,[\'}.",'.ié’z“;{:fi%“flefl:fw:: ‘X‘r‘n!:s:. H 2 Bo 1 Aaced height to make a difference of three or | eral Abbott J. Myers, you know, was at | ably a storm wiaf?tstgg::‘mt:‘g?c:. y monies—Another Import- culated by the democrats all over the state. | gy §CEIRES B8 FIOMBT AL WS B MO ave Beon lIntroducel four degrees. Then there is this to con- | the head of the army signal corps dur- | ton, 8. C.” e ! ant Enterprise. It is also stated that mue tickets were re- | i carriage would not be able to get through into the Service. sider: ‘Drug store thermometers’— [ ing the rebellion, and when the war *‘And that helps boards of trade,” \ coived in Lincoln yesterday and passed | tho yunnels between Florence and Bologna, that’s what all signal service men call | ended he was like Othello, his occupa- | marmured th rcher . ) through the mails in packages of 500 each. the Ttali ! 4 A ol o searcher for truth fm'a Bt the republican who. chances to be duped | * h_u“ ll; n:,mvernmqnt ‘.lll‘:fl naae ".’.“ge ol0 B onatilitie. them—are not.very accurate. The next | tion gone. He or his friends conceived | tone calculated to indicate a dense ig- Laxcorx BUReau or Tie Oxana Beg, by this stale chestuut ought not. to be pitied. | Toreela! -“unfl:nml‘:i‘iuu;m‘:u"”“{‘lmnn‘g:‘(‘:trlx‘;g: CTnateutn ther, Mr. Glesk®" time you go into a drug store look at | the idea of continuing the servico with | norance and invoke the pitylng em- f 100 Sruatr, The state contral committeo have mailed | ot moupn the tunsls readily. Uniira tho at o’ the weather, Mr. Cler their thermometers—a dozen of them— | Myers still at its head, and they seized LiINCoLN, Oct. 27, specimens of the regul ticket to every ' lightenment of the observer. popped out the news-gatherer as he | and see how many of them agree. I | upon the idea set afloat before the war, popped into the office of Signal®Service have noticed a variation of eight de- | that of making observations of the Obsorver L. A. Walsh. It had boon an | 87288 between two such thermometers, | weather. The army didn’t need much October morning to delight the soul I don’t like to tell a man what our ther- | of a corps, and the weather had man- ; mometer registers, for he is generally | aged pretty well to take care of itself, but a sudden rain wind brought an | disgusted. And Idon’t blame him. Tt |but between the two Myers and his afternoon dull and drear. The reporter | doesn’t register the weather affected by | friends presented a_plausible case and climbed up to the top of the postoffice | the conditions under which he lives. | congress fell in with their plans. The to find out what it all meant, and found For ordinary use, [ would rather take | service began in 1871 with thirty men the clerk of the weather all alone inan | Uhe record of a fairly good thermometer | sent out from Governor’s island in New 1e clerk ol 9 D) 4 that getsthe benefit of radiation and | York harbor, but I think only one of out-of-the-way nook just under the reflection.” them is yet with us, Three-fourths of eaves. He wheeled around in his chair “‘How about the wind?" y will be abundant opportunity for careful veniences—but ke has a beer mug handy. comparison with the tickets offered at the polls. | The anniversaries of the Baptists of Ne- * oraska will be held in this city, commencing b Mouday, October 29, and will continue until f Friday evening, October 23. The mectings | include the state Sunday school couvention, the Nebraska pastors' conference and the regular convention of the church. The 4 meetings will be held in the First Baptist church, and the introductory services will commence at 7:00 o'clock Monday evening, when the organization will be made, and the subject of ‘“The Missionary Work of the Yes. The market for grain is greate ly affected by the woather, you EI.'. This map makes no forecast. It shows the conditions existing last night all over the United States, and any perses examining it may make his own dedue~ tions. You would be surprised to kiow :n)n‘)w soon men betéon:iu ox?ort in readiag ese charts and drawing pretty curate conclusions.” § ¢ “‘Of course you never guess at the weather,” ventured the visitor as & A NBW. RNTHRERIEE, H. C. Nett, of Lincoln, is at the Millard, The Nebraska Feed, Water, Heater and F. M. Hall, of Lincoln, is at the Paxton. Purifier company, of Omaha, filed articles of | J. Zehrung, of Lincoln, 1s at the Millard. Ancorparationsawiin s thexsostotary. of state | J. N. Heater, of Lincoln, is at tho Millard. ay. e title ol e company fully de- A Horibes its objact and. purpose. - A capital | 3 G- White, of Lincoln, is at the Murray. stock of 830,000 is authorized and_the follow- | P. J. Waller, of Stanton, is at the Millard. ing named gentlemen comprise the associa- B. N. Goodell, of Kearney, is at the Pax- tion, vizz: E. W. Whipple, E. White, George | ton. the present force are college graduates. arting shot. . f ‘W. Casper, James R. Wasson, Frank Reyn- 0. J. Collman, of Broken Bow, is at the | to eye the intruder, and responded: **Some winds, I amsatisfied, affect the For years there was a school of instruc- i uho_g.h-_o The public should remem- - i Sunday Bchool” will be discussed by Rev. J. | olds, E. T. Davis and W. H. Bruner. Murray. “We are likely to huve a cold wave. | thermometer a half a degree or even | tion, Fort Myers, near Washington, but | bor that our predictions 1 D. Pulis, of Kearney. Services will beheld QITY NEWS AND NOT Mrs, B. Gorman, of North Platte, isat tle | , pES more.” that'has been discontinued,’ Dor thatour prediotions are (0RE NI P regularly during the snniveMarics, morning, | _Governor Thayer came in yesterday even- | Murray The indications aro that the thermome- Ligypay ingtruments do you use?” “Well, how does the servico benefit | {lition whre for lars o moh J, L proba! afternoon and evening, and the following im;l,l bu‘r lB"h:fmu m;ldn_y for l'-‘ir'!.lh. le\l(-rc he M\v. B. Thompson, of Grand Island, isatthe | ter will drop 20> before to-morrow ““Barometers, thermometers, a hygro- | the public?” m‘;;flg “t%:'zeu{:r)ul:-“ uldl?trxwtsl. l';:r‘.:.- i v will talk politics and prove to the listeninj urray. oht.” ¢ noior el YEEO= | ¥ho & 3 ssissippl exten e e 1D, Bowick Pl | orowd that he 1 still in his prime. % | "George E. Donington, of Falls City, is at | M1Eht: k moter for measuring humidity, an ane You people who have no crops o | from St. Paul to Cairo. Now we giye | sedeulil oS Evans, York; L. D, Homes, Colonel A, G Fairbrother left to-day for | the Millard. *“Well, why don’t you hang out your | mometer, for getting the velocity of the | perishable property at the mercy of the | the indications Dy states, and the E. A. Russell, Ord; K. R. Currie, | Boston and New York., He will be frcm H. H. Dean, of the United States army, is | flagy” wind, a vane, rain and snow guages. Do | weather may not give our warnings Ler areas make it more dificult. I am nt: H. L. House, Omaha; E. W. | home three wecks, but his pen will glide for | at the Murray. i “I'm not sllowed to o that until I re- | ¥0u 8ee that!® much attention. But the people who J 3 l’ncn-rdi) Edgar: A. W. Lamar, Omaha: | the Call just the same. He promiscs the | John H. Ames and R. O. Phiilips, of Lin- 10! e sure that if the public knew the ex and the difficulty of our work it 'I:l.lfl. give the service the credit it deserves. Come again,” as the reporter left. The operator pointed to a little glass | need them appreciate them, When we 0 in 5 case enclosing a small, slowly revolving | opened the station at Milwaukee and “When will that be?” persisted the | cylinder. On the latter was a strip of | hung out our cautionary flags the old ¢ inquisitor. paper crossed by lines set close together, | sea captains laughed at the idea of send- Mark Noble, Fairbury; D. W, Grimth, Ne- raska City; C. K. entiey, Ulysses: B, odell, Sterlings 1. W. Foster, Omaba; A, . Mittawy, Wi boys the cleanest politican news from the | coln, are at the Paxton. 3 Empire state, S. C. Kittson and Mrs. Commodore Kitt- The republicans of the First ward held a | sou and maid, of St. Paul, Minn., are at the coessful meating at the council cham- | Paxton. cive orders from Washington.” ahoo; L. W. Terry, Grand i WG , ‘Chicago, T0.: J. N. | ber last night. Stirring addresses wore | W. H. Dixson, superintendent of the Mil- | “All the stations throughout the | and a pencil pointleftupon itleftan ir- | ing out boys to teach men who had PROMINENT P 5 A Crvars o K selon Gontral Uity | made by Hon. W. Henry Smith and Colonel | waukee road, with headquarters at St. Paul, | sountry will make observations a¢ § | regular trail. swiled the lakes for twenty or thirty BREORS F. ‘Gates, Minn lis, Minn.; C. W, \l‘: s. During the mecting the audi- | Minn., is at the Millard, S h A “That is the register for the anemo- | years. Now those old sea dogs will hang Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmos has res: | Counell, Pawnee City; W. L. Brown, Blair, eated to some good vocal music | Mr'T. C. Barnes, of Walnut Hills Center, | 0'clock to-night and wire them | jatap ' resumed theofficer. *Tt is con- | about the office all night waiting for in- | the presidency of the medival librar; E | A A PLUCKY WOMAN, 'l = b.vol.i “1'“1‘.";;‘,‘"‘,""\“‘ Mr. 1\‘13!"3‘- e ‘.2;;,K‘v"ii.!’i?;‘:.‘{.‘.“r‘é.‘l‘““fl:““fil’;..‘é',"‘.:“:&::; to Washington. The ‘indications’ | nected with the instrument and works | dications of favorable weather before | ton. 4 Last night, while W. A. Henry, the rlando Tefft, of Avoca, chairman o 3 (M will be sent back as soon | automatically by electricity, so that we | pulling up anchor. Since 1879 there | President Cleveland is about to ofter | mi b cham- | Cass c entral committee, and Allen | now and may start west in a day or so. p ? ) 2 l & ! s about to offer Oal | street blacksmith, was at the nou'uc\\ cham: }l:;;:u:‘l: u‘giot::' ., Sl AN Btars sl as the deductions can be made, but of | do not have io go up on the roof to | has been a cluuse in mavine insurance | View for sale. Getting ready so soon to il lt.::e:u:‘ll::.'«"::\"‘x'{..‘th.vfip:lv}:}':x:pr?&lr)ihzT»‘:‘i':xfi:.‘t city to-day. Yhose l.'gnlloml-u both pronounce Farming on the Plains. course the information will not be avail- | Wateh. But the beauty of it is that it | policies cancelling the risk on any ship | leave? {1 purpose of burglary, but was frustrated in | that county safe for the republican nominees. | gDenver Republican: A fair is | able to the public until morning. Wait works right along for twenty-four hours | that sails in the face of the storm sig- | Ex-Speaker Randall is slowly improving, i is design by the nerve of Mrs, Henry, who [ General Vifquain, consul to Colon, formerly 2 y g. f now in progress n the town of | u mypute," as the visitor opened hislips il.fl{h‘x[u":l‘,,.sx‘g;lvx Tfi‘.}‘fl?‘:..d‘fi?fié&“t ::.iflv.h({ L‘f B e hayelanrnedine shidte to break in; **‘don’t find fault. It does | locity of the wind during its greater or “*But we are not on the lakes,” ven- seem slow to hoist the flag after a cold [ strongest rate for the day, but we | tured the visitor. wave is fairly here, but the public don’t | couldn’t tell.” *True, but there are many other kinds feel hulf s bud about it us L do. The | *How do you measure the rain-fall?” | of perishable property. We try to reach and there is every reason to hope for his ultimate restoration to active public service, Old Tom King, who fought Heenan, died last week in his own house in England, havs ing made a considerable fortunc on the tarf as a bookmaker, [} seized the toa kettle and went for him with all tho vim that she could command. The | racket and crics of the woman atiracted the { atteation of a passing policoman, but by | making a long jump and a sharp run in the darkness escaped capture. The plucky lady editor of the State Democrat, ia hore on @ | W ruy, Washington county, which is an day and will probably remain until after | exhibitof eastern agricultural products. eloction. He says he does not wish to be | It is a creditable display. and shows that called an offensive partisan, and will nottake | the farms of that part of the state are an active part in the campaign. producing good crops in spite of the as- bud ¢ ¢ 4 ' h ; Gen. Francis A. Walker Las been engaged y ST ol o —_—— e > “rainbelt” region is | theory at Washington is that all parts s another thing people don't | and warn as many people as possible. | by the Cit ] o R P e KINGS AND QUEENS. jortion that all the “rainbelt™ region is | ot oountry shold be heard from be- | understand. We use a funnel shape in- | Until three vears ao o farmers’ bulletin | (en. Sheridan. Thon woioeiitr b, Shioy o8 il besent for. During the K““ few .hyhg the A L Tm— A This is the third year of success in (ore‘duducunnu_ur:‘:l mu.d?'i‘ 'l‘hn'ty-lll\l'n strument with the l«»\;xl-r end ‘h\llllug "wusafim. oij"i wbthu po;wm;le while sta- | for late in Defember. ty has been flooded with suspicious charac Prince Bismarck recently gave a fete to i " irrigati i stations, many in the nor and north- | into a receiving cup. The opening has | tioned at Pitsburg. made an investi- Sors. And soveral attempts at burglary have | his servants and tonants at Fredrishsruhe to | farming without irrigation on the plains, ¥ ¥ Ly & B been made, some of which have been suc- coelebrate the despatch to Berly of 5,000 tele- [ The most skeptical must be convinced cessful, graph poles cut in his forests. Bismarck | from the experiences of these three has supplied Germany with 100,000 telegraph | years that the experimental stage is uring the last ten years, sed, and that ‘‘rainbelt” farming can King Hubert of Italy is “a man of iron depended upon. will.”” " When his physi advised hima | ¢The farmers in the vicinity of Wra: ?ur';l:f.: ":‘:Al: of .xo;uh:l‘ve :mt:;:m:(“ lm":: aro not the only wen whohave mes with > A 'Off entirely, and what | Success, for exhibits will be made to-da, ‘Theodore Roosvelt has taken the the republicans in New York. Tflw an ‘‘advanced" republican but he never away from his party or allows it to get fi from him, John Bright never commits 8 [ memory, He merely makes notes ; the words to come when speaking, “ sionally he writes short passages, and west, send reports to this office, and we | ten times the area of the receiver, so | gation and found that not more than can often foretell a cold wave six or | that the water in the latter is ten times fial! of the 800 bulletins were posted eight hours befora we hear from Wash- | as deep as the actual precipitation. By | before noon. That was one of Myer's ingon. We hres not allowed ta make | that simple process of magnifying, we | wild schemes, but, of course, we have deductions, however, but the time is | ave enabled to measure arain-fall as lit- | had to learn, llku anyone else in a new coming when that will be changed. As | tle as one-hundreth of an inch. Snow | business. We now depend on the flag a matter of facs an office has been estab- | is melted and measured. Old meteor- | system to post the general public. Thia lished at St. Paul for the especial pur- | ologists estimated it would take twelve | office sends the indications to twenty- WITH MASONIC CEREMON The arrangements for layin stone of the new court house have at last been completed, and the day and aate fixed upon. The ceremony will commence at 2 o'clock on the afternoon of November 1, and will be under the direct auspices of the ' Ma- i i 3 M: g v W | of products grown near Akron an o of watching, for cold waves, and | inches of snow to make one of rain, but | three points in Jowa and thirty in Ne- M 8:‘.‘.1{.2‘:;‘::&;‘:.‘3.‘",‘2%‘:: :v‘:.l.:. gk "fi"i'\"-'!fi; w‘fif:‘:‘filfln%:.fl.e Abon x‘:lx::;:ux;amfil;n:.l: :glh‘:ofial.l;:wvmlnlu Yuma. Both of these places are centers | deductions ave,now made at that sta- | the expericnce of our service teaches | braska, at all of which the signals are | and never prepares a simglo sentence. will deliver the address, - The programme of | 'm0 0\s that the mikado of Japan has be- | Of agricultural districts that have been | HOn, d 3 tuat ten are enough, displared simultansously,” Thomas M. Norwood, once 8 United the day will be the usual one on such occa: | .oue‘addioted to alcohol, while the ewmperor | tested during the past three years and These cold waves—where do they You are a department of the army, “But where does the farmer come | senator from bwr{]‘fl. and now a sions. ~ There will be parades and musio and | ¢%8 ST T REMPRIRIP IS SERTFEE | £001d to bo worthy of praise that was | cOme from? ¥ are you not? ¥ Fo in’” queried the solicitious investigator. ;,‘::){l":}"l”:gl‘:l‘;l‘m'-"m‘;‘;‘;;'::’:"I.. mn;‘:{r Efil::“c:lxrna::;ln;ul.l:c‘lxl-lg:g;ll\e:? llJ: ps ,.,..ma]?.ug,uknot nt'lhllrwry, Knlunfi: given them three years ago by the more From the north or northwest. That Ofticially, the signal service in in- Well, he may come into town,” re- . 8 g is stili playing poker, with disasirous resul the stone will be place history of the county up to the present time, copies of the stato coustitution and constitution of the United States. The occasion is one that should draw citizens from all parts of the oounty, conservative farmers who have made to his national treasury. Keally, those re- | 1} air homes there. e poleniees 06K 19 ness the services of | iy truth seems to be that, except > . 3 % among the sand hills, the whole of the Sultan Muley Hassan, of Morocco, is a | S{RONE U Sanc RHls, the whob man about forty-five years of age, though it | PI3ins lying within seventy-five or one is possible that he doesn't know his exact | hundred miles west of the Kaunsas line age. As he has 3,500 wives it is probable that | are susceptible of cultivation withoutir- he looks older than he really is. Heisa | rigation. reminds me, by the way, of an editor- | cluded in tl army, and its members | sponded the observer with a smile. ial squib in THE BEE the other day. | have military ranks but we regard that | “Seriously, however, that is a grave de- The writer gave the service credit for | asa bit of red-tape fiction. The ob- [ fect in the service, We are hampered glving timely warning of storms from | servers rank as sergeants, but they | by lack of means to place the results of the west, but intimated that swrms | never use their military title, and never | our work within easy reach of the far- from the east were mot properly re- | expect to do military duty. We havea | mer, [ believe the time is coming ported. The general direction of the | regular form of enlistment, but we can | when there will be a flag station on storms of the whole country—and of the | get a discharge if we can better our- | every hill that commands any consider- handsome man, with a calm, imposing man- ———— world, for that matter—is from the west | selves, so that it is about the same as a | able extent of country.” nor which is most becoming. Hiseyes are *You'd better let politics alone and [ to the east. A storm, after passing | conditional contract. Every man inthe **Are any other means employed?’’ more animated snd show more shrewduness | go to work,” said the irate woman to | north of Omaha, may dipsouthward and | service has tolearn telegraphy, also the *Yes, there are issued daily at Bos- than those of most of his countrnmen. her democratic husband. “You've | spread. If iy spread back as far as | code of army or ‘wigwag’ signals, sothat | ton, Chicago, Cincinnati, Washington, The emperor of China's railway train, | grown 8o lazy that now you don't earn | Omaha it would give the impression of ing title: “Plutocracy; or, American- Slavery. A Politico-Bocial Novel,” story s a study of the leading problems before the country at is @ protest against the tyranny of T A Peouliar Accideat. v Electrical Review: Charles Di an employe of the Chesapeake and tomac e oPllolnu company, was near top of a pole in Baltimore roocgntly, justing a wire, when the poi e crack, snappsi ab the ground and A LIBEL SUIT IN THE WIND, The injunction granted J. D. McFarland temporarily preventing the collection of the ¢ special sewer tax }in the secoud sewer dis- trict of this city, awakens the echoes, and | Councilman Dedn scorches as follows. Tho implications of the petition are suc hthat | umbrage results, and the atmosphere is full we could be of use in the event of war.” | 8t. Louis and Kansas City, maps ¢s- | B270ss the strect. Fortunal in of threats o libel suit. It is stated this | whichfhas just been constructed iu F'rance, is | your galt. *“That’s the very point, my | being a west-bound storm.” *Yours service seems intended for | pecially designed for boards of de t it bo ) 9 \! { “mmm Dean, mwfm"-ixfl&'fi :mwh'm"“":fl,‘.'.f,‘g"fl,‘b‘:.}:m"";; fla\u‘, exclaimed the busband. ““We "\511 y ure the thermometer readings | the benefiy of farmers and business | Here {l Dnu'Q( them, At the‘lo;::e::. lvzt:'ce:l l"-ml?:“;fir::l::lll.l?fl no;pol!u {natituted Tor $33'000 damages at once. The | emperor's own use. They are most sumptu- | 4eMOCTats are working to put salt on | of the signal service in summer so much | rather than the army, How do you ex- | of eash iignal station in the country | side, which broke the fall. The man text Of the pelition was published in Tz | ously decorated and furnished, aud the doors | the free list so that we can earn ours | lower than those of citizens'? plain the incongruity? J d Bse a day or two ago: ed aa athad, aud P X4 il e R T s e | A P A you notice a little circle or disk. Its | was taken from his perch by some oiti- 1, Heury H. Dean, councilman of the Third -y ith immense ‘“The present system was not ) brass dragous. In each of the imperial | you te object.” undenmd,thn the thermometer re- | lished until | byut nwn';aba':xok ::l‘;: ::n‘:.”“::‘l’:‘!f. "‘l“.hnnldr::w'“:::oru;h‘ #i’;;‘h‘::::l‘?y 0 00k WY Nt oy

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