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) THE OMAHA wa. ATT OVEMBER 11, 1883.~SIXTEEN PAGES. 13 a e e e e e ey |The Great Political Excitement is Over BROWNING, KING & CO. In their “DAYLIGHT” Store sell goods equally cheap to Republicans, ‘g Democrats, Labor Reformers and Prohibitionists. ; —=BE T S= 5 If you're a smiling winner or forlorn loser get your UIT, . OVERCOAT, Hat, Etc AT / HEADQUARTERS. BROWNING, KING & CO. COPON> U< @4 4 ™ | @R argest Manufacturers and Refailers of Glothing in the World. S. W. Corner 15th and Douglas Sts., - - - Omaha, Neb. ¢ | | 1 * DU O | =Y ) . : Auoricant Ho stands six fool in his stock | the rocognition of Jupan us un indunandont | gur fmports of bumboo ware smount t0 | Jupun sclls 000,000 worth of copper a vear, | BAT T l N Q| there are publi ! ‘ p A S T frame is padded with | power, and Count Inouye, the Japanese sec £102,000 of Japanese money. Wo buy more | and it has one of the largest copper mimes in l\ there are public gas lamps at conven- i GOVERNOR HUBBARDIN JAPAN ks, A Bl D0 e e ah. | 1Ay of state, and the rsident of the con- | (han fwice i much of Juban as ang othor | the world, It sells a® million dbiiars’ worth ARKET HOUSES | i ut intorvals, 1t scems queer to sce sa not far from P ) = Tt in acknowledging the receipt of | country,and our imports are increasing every | of por n, a million dollars’ worth of silk many gas moters side by side on shelves He would make threc of the ordinary | president Cleveland's message aliuding to | year. Tu 1877 we bought a million and a | handkerchiofs, and $7,000,00 worth of tea. above the stall | The American Legation Building | Japanese, and have yet to spare. He 1s a | treaty revision, said that he gladly took the | half more goods than in 1886, and the Umited | We buy nearly all of the Japan tea that | & Ramble Among the Dealers and | At the Lexington markot Tuesday, ! rood-looking man. His big head is well set | opportunity to thank the minister for the | States wiil probably continue to be Japan’s | gocs abroad. The sales of raw silk amount to Th Friday. Saticday 4 -y andglisiQuesy Busiobalings, B alouldors and his blue eyes shiue | boid and enlightencd stands he hud taken in | best custome £19,000,000 und of cocoons. 10 $200,000 ol ares, i b"J“l:'-dp‘x‘xxn‘;g::Ls‘hl]«:: st treaty revision. The last report of the state | “But how about her purchases from us?” | a year. It sells $100,000 worth of rice. The ! out from under a broad and high fore- | oo Mo P20 POELO Lot ) , e s g et a e day are made Saturday evening. On e partment at Washington contamed a copy | I asked. tradeof the country is susceptibleof increaso v y g FACTS OF JAPANESE DIPLOMACY. Fifty-five years old, his hair | of this lettor of Count Inouye, tlhere is no seutiment in trade,” roplicd | and Japan is by no meuns ab the end of its | 'Y ELY SCENES ON MARKET DAYS. | those days, at certain hours, the sirects become iron-gray, and short, curly DISCRIMINATING AGATNST AMERI( Governor Hubbard. *‘Japan buyswhere she | material development.” —_ ?\H'ruuml{ng the market are cut off i shiskers cover his face. He Some of our former ministers to n buy the cheapest, and heér purchascs | JAPAN'S FUTURE, How an Institut e rom public travel and are occupied b; Chat on Trade--Amorion as | PO B1ay W ieKes N via, el | WOr 80 anxious to have tho from Gireat Britain, China, the Bast Iudics | *How about its future?’ 1 asked. peion Needsdinfomanalliy ovo gy iowiatalls S0l roat tiot (h R ALY § Java 1er and How e A R vaduate of Harvard, | that they were willing to cone and Siam, are. gredter than those of the | T thinie Japun s g great future,” replied 1s Managed inthe Kast—The mand for room, that not onty the thres g cated in Virginia 4 arvard, | B e N ahin for ) A & | United States. z Governor Hubbard. *“The advances the na People Who et LoV ANho R H She Might Supply her With lic moved to Texas when the state was Wild, | wad'so groat that the Jupanese government GREAT BRITATN tion hus made in the past two decades have z (2] ":‘f‘,' ”“"’-‘“‘;’}h*’ market house is situ- i Cotton, ete. and began to practice law there in the days | paid httie attention to them as factors in the | which buys from Japan one-seventh as much | no parallel in the history of civilization. The and Buy. ated, but also an extra square at each end is filled with booths, wagons and roads, telegraph., a com- ] hand-carts. In this space then, oxtend- system, and a government N T Baltimore Market Houses, when the practitioners rode the circuit with | matter. “America is with us anyhow,” was | 48 we do, or $3,000,000 worth of goods to our | country hus now ablock-stone in one side of their saddle-bags | their theory, and hence the encouragement | $21,000,000; sells to her in round numbers, pulsory school y Carp's Letter. : 5% 2 2 " | given to foreign trade and to foveign impor- | $18,000,000 worth of her goods, or six cimes | based on the plan of those , 5 : : ing for five blocks, are shown almost i& L i aud a pistol and a deck of cards in the other. | ga¢ion wag placed where it would do the | as much as the United States. France buy- | rope. It is bringing machinery to the devel- BALTIMORE, Nov. 5. [Special Corres- | every variety of edible products, Of Tok10, Oct. 24.—|Special Correspondence | Since then he has been one of the leading | most good. Whether by actual or implied | ing §,000,000 seils §10,000,000, and sells four | opment of its industries and of its wonderful | pondent to Tne B .] Among the in- | course, outside of the market house, the L of Tuk Ber. |Icalled, to-day, upon the United | men of this state, and he was for years its | agreement I do not know, but it is said that | times' as much as she buys. The United | resources. Japan is a country of minerals | i 0ion o he ity of Baltimore, the | different wares are located promiscu- B States minister to Japan. The American le- | governor. He is a fine Spanish scholar, and | Germany and England have been favored ; States, Japan's best customer, is proportion- and its coal and iron will add to its national £ 'y SISLINOTR, e H nt et t within th il A ; e o | By eroE, B 8 e hotations from | Over other countrios, and a merchaut of | ally ber smallest creditor, and our sales to | Wealth. ~Agriculturally, it is susceptiblo of | markets and parks may claim the fivst | 0U51¥3 Dut within the building an at- gpiionayiTokio da better houssd $han Mol ot )| his con yorsation taome Jivs 4 : Yokohama told me that he knew of Japancse | the Japanese lst yoar amounted only to a | ereat development, and 'only a small propor- | yunlcs. Not that the former are located | CPY, 8t classification is made. The our foreign missions. The building is an im- | the classics of several languages. A fine or- | yoronants going abroad to buy goods who | little over $3,000,000. 1 use in these estimates | tion of the land is now cultivated. The great | . SNORIVRAY B e 00 center aisle is almost wholly devoted to L) mense two-story brick of a bright cream | ator; he madc one of the ringing spoeches | were refused passports to leave Japan until | the Japanese doilav, which is about equal to | islaud of Yeszo, which lies north of Japan | in fine buildings or equipped with mag- | use us a meat markot, and the meat color. It overlooks the bay of Yeddo with | of tho convention at Chicago, which gave | they had ugreed to bu theic gooda in Gor: Incenta, It is'w mistako/tnas s is'no, andime Aad whioh pontains 50000 Musrs 'ffi',fi,‘{;“i"l' nificent fixtures, but that they afford mflls are llnlr jer than tho others, { its thousands of queer Japanese junks, and it | Cleveland his first nomination. He wastem- [ many. At any rate the statistics show that | will sell more when the American factors | ne: . ch as ow K 4 | both rich and poor the opportunity of bout one-half of the building toward \ has more Living rooms than has tho whito | porary chairman of the convention,and when | the ~ German — exports — last year in- | have studied tho markot, and have adapted | states, with the excoption of Maine. is unde- | L\ o5 o0 ™ ldl' ey the west is set apart for the fish and o v ! creased @ miltion and & half, | themselves to it. veloped. This contains good wheat lands, | purchasing their commodities in the } 0 W8 8 566 Abd (oo house. Tt has big windows, wide halls, and | Cleveland became president he made hun | Fncland and Gormany furnish the rail: AMELICAN EXPORTS, mountains of minerals, and it is the home | face of the fullest competition. and of | CieP deslers. This portion is supplied ¢ the front side of it has long corridors cov- | miunister to Japan. roud supplios of Japan, ‘and in the let | what are the chiof articles of export from | Of the Ainos, who are sipposcd by some tobo | (A8 0 ) (e FERRCT O WL OF | with long tables. upon which tiie fish L ered with glas It is one of the best houses THE JAPANESE MISSION ting of railroad contracts by the government | the United States to Japan?' I asked. | the original Japanese. There are, however, i A By s pi Mauy fine specimens of differ- d 8 B the other powers have been favored over the Keroseno o1l leads the list,” was the re- | Very few of these, and the Jupancse govern- | money. There some ten or a dozen | ent varieties inay be seen here each in Tokio, and it is one of the few legation is now one of the most mportant of our for- | Americans 0 2 D858 A year or so ago, General | ply. ‘Half of the Japunese nation lights its [ Ment is now trying to colonize the island. | different market places, situated in var- | market day. In “scason, hard and soff buildings for which Unclo Sam pays ront. It | gz osts, Thirty-threo years ago this ua- | Jamos H. Wilson, an American represonting | fousos with our coat oil Tamps, and wo sold | Tho Jupanese aro wych liko the rench, in | g0, 5f SETEER SO0 BERIAE 1 VA | oraba, tarvaping and. ofhor dolicacies costs §3,500 a year, and it is w houso which, if | G e G000 peonte was unlocked to the | @ large syndicaté of American capitalists | in 186, over §4000,000 worth of coal oil to | that they like home. The only el o S B8 may be obtained. The stalls bolong- Tocated at Washington, would reat for twice | (8t i el LTI TH Ve s to an | Was here at Tokio. Ile offered w bid for | Japan. There hus been a falling off this | EMIGRATION have thoe benefit thereol without going | j,:"t0 donlers in other kinds of goods J ) L2 e 4 4 Sun," | e o iat the contract wonld be | Then the Américan clock is popular in Japan, | Hawaiean Islands, where about 3, apa- | o thre vl o Ly 2 Sl an T o it | lald out in all the wonders of Japanese ®&ar- | oo gonan is called, is indebted for its intro- | given to the lowest bidder, His request was | and you may see thousands r‘,, ',,,,m,, in 'y,,'ki,,, nese haye gone within the past fow years to | °F three davs each week are set apart [ aisles in the rest of the building. Here dening, and choico troes of flowers fill tho air | 4. ion 1o forcign nations. At this time, | neither refused nor granted, though he was | The common office clock, which hangs upon | engage in sugar raising. Yezzo, however, is | 88 market days, but varying in the dif- | may be found dealers in confectionery, I with a perpetual perfume. A cool wind con- | 00 T T s T barbar. | Willing to agree to furnish ‘wll of the mate- | the wall, is vory popular, and one. sale of | @ part of Japan, and it is thought there may | ferent market houses. These latter, | fruit, vegotables, pickels, jellios, buts 4 stantly blows from the sea and the Ameri- | o™\ "o 0r (leaties were en. | Fidls for these roads and their equipment, | clocks here amounts w 160,000 Japanese dol- | beless trouble in getting imigrants. The | for the most part, consistof brick struct- | ter and eggs, cheese, preserved meats, » I R A R : 3 X i ® o | save the iron for the rails at a price fully as | lars a year. Many a Japunese baby is now | only American railroad in Japan is in Y T P BT, e ven ly | flowers, bread, pastry anc y e oo s e | tered into with the foreign powers bro- | fow, if not lower, than the lowest idder. 1t | Drought up on Auwerican condcnscd il | and it is intimated 1o mo that tio. €ovorn | et anits for that parioes in o e | Urings, Ehor. i e d mayyolhes b J viding that Japan should not charge | afterwards became an open secret that these | and $55,000 worth was sold last year. Wo | ment, in the extension of its railways there, A f the city. Th & raddish-grinder, the Itali i i surroundings of the house are essentially | ..ot thoir citizeus more than 5 per cent | roads had been contracted for in advance by | sell ~ sole leather, books, = machin- | will build them on the American plan, It js [ DAl plan of the city. These buildings FResInREhEon:. bhe - linlian: i th his Japanese. Long lines of cottages with over- » the German and English capitalists, and it [ ery and provisions, and Japan bought | probable that American materials will be to | #rc generally open on all sides, consist- uit stand, and tho old woman with her . Langing roofs and with open walls line tho ::Ln’::‘ :;:-‘;I,‘:‘:r‘:;l:":\:h.mfiga‘n‘:lv. "(‘m-‘.:::;‘n*‘,r‘; was also not doubted as a consideration for | §94,000 worth of our flour last | alarge extent used, and that, though the | ing merely of a roof supported by brick | pie. But, in (uut, a fine lot of goods are stroet ut the right, and I caughtwith my | boo® RN A6 - s | the support of these governments in the re- | year. These figures are small, but | roads will be built under the direction | picrs comiected by arches at tlie top. | displayed. Some butchers wmake a £ o & bavedonred girl carrviue & buokes | Hhoy:should be tried in. the ocouris of the on of the treaties. Governor Hubbard | American foreign trade is in its infancy, and | of Japanese civil engineers, tho materials | The stalls are arcanged in rows, back | speciaity of Chicago dressed meat, X consul of the nation of the individual agaiust | presented General Wilson's case, and he has | it has a world yet to conquer. ere in the '~ and machinery may come from America. back. s o which i voferre i SADEFR8 DaNe-1oHgoc g g 1 of the nation of the individual t ted General Wilson' d he hus | it 1 1 y ] H. d mach from Al 1| to buck, down the center and along the s preferred only by those who { of water, and u small boy with & watering | wpom the suit was brought. For instance, | 4t all opportunities pushed east there aro six hundred millions of pe believe that at presont the prospocts for | walls™ Ty most cuses the demand for | consider its cheapness. = - { @, as Irodouptothe gate inmy jinrik- | ey Juninese merchant suos me for a debt, TUE RIGHTS OF AMERICANS, who require more or less of some king Amoriosn msterials aud'Amarican trado was | 5100 seome to hayo bean 8o groat that | In-the fruit dopartmont all th i sha. i ey el | As the friends of to the same | £00ds which American brains push and cap- never better in Japan, and I think that fair | * S90IE ) oo A ; 3 ; department all the varie- P LR e 1:1\1;!,':‘):"111(._: ”'C} suit u:\:: ourg mul' aoa Mhofriends e rosul ds, 1| 181 can’ farnish at a profit, atd in-Japan and free compotition Wil bo given to all for- Ir mo u‘-rhtlm...:{s_ hu\l’l»mznl made to the | tics grown in this neighborhood are o g general, Mr. Greathouse, an © decision OF | ym told, that Americans will hereafter, ha there are 38,000,000 of peaple who are ready — cign nations in the letting ot the government | building to serve only as a shelter for | shown in vast quantities, Banannas The governor's carriage wus standing at | Mr. Greathouse settles the fact whether I | a fair competitive show, and that Ameri- | to take from America what shoe has to scil contras With such a state of affairs, [ do | protection of goods beneath, Above | and other tropical fruits arc cheap, as the gate and his two bettoes had charge of | must pay or not. In the caseof civil or | can business will be better now than it has | that fits theiwr needs, whenever they buy not fear for American pluck, push and ingen- | two market houses that I have noticed | they are brought here by water direct it. Oue with a bowl-like hat had his regular | oriminal suits between foreigners themsolyes | been before, provided the Auerican manu- | 1 as choaply of leras of othor pations.” We uity, As totho traatios, [ think thoy oughit | are public halls used asarmories for the | California fruit is not generally seen place in the coachman’s seat, and the other, | the consul of the dofendant are tho judges | fiothrors wuit thomselves to the wrade. I | scil to North Chiua 86,0000 worth of tobo revised, and America hus always boen | yeetings and drill of the militia, and commands high prices by renson of who usually runs ahead to clear tho way, had | and the only appeal is to the minister of the | nat their railfoads were orizinaliy started | a year, and this i the teeth of the manufac- ©Of powers has, however, taken an indefinite | fl’f‘; principl murkot-place is that | tho cost of trangportation. At presont hold of tho horses' heads, 1 stopped atthe | forcign nation of the individual agamst | on the Euglish aystem, and that all the roads | tiring' nations of iurope. Japan is move recess, and whien iv will"be- called “together | called Loxington murket, und the rep- | there is a grout quantity of chostouts porter's lodge and was received by anold | whom the suit is brought. This fact adds | which have been built since that time i this | accessible to us. Why should we not sell to 28ain, is a question. utation of this, perhaps, has been | on the market, These are gathored in Japaneso servant who had a four-inch strin | groatly to the importance and dutics of our | PArt of Japan have bey mide to run in con- | hert PHESENT GROWTH, Apread ,l,‘,‘“";"‘;l. “.“”i"”" o, Jave | the ‘]""“;"1““” vicinity. Though this of u bald spot from his forehead to his crown, | miristers to China and Japan over other for- | Bection with these Fnglish bullt roads. | #How much da we scll!” I asked *Do you think the present growth of Japa- | Kone. Adhe building itsclfcan claim no (is the home of the oyster, strange » s o Japan has its shops built with a view to sup- [ “None,”” replied Governor Hubbard. *The neso civilization will continue !’ attention whatever excopt in regard to | enouglh 2 ave sold at which bore ovidence of being shaved daily. | €ign winisters, It makes him T ST T L Pt 7 Py 7] B e zation will cont i 1 - xeer 4 gh none are sold at the market, 3 P I d the ma o) an cottons do_not enter the nese 4l do notsee why it should not,” repiled | size. Ove would say that it had a | probably for the rey 4 i He bad his back bair tied upon this in the A SUPKENE JUDGR of American patterns | markets. We do not make the choap and Governor Hubbard The Japancse are | rather 1 annoaran i probably fouthe reuson that tho ladiss approved Japanese fashion in the shape of a | @nd in Governor Hubbard's ofiice at Nokio cquire new machinery and an eutive It artiolo of cptton required by the Jup: wiiokly assimuIaLIal the Wass of ks Wast ;'.'““'.' ”.)"f:’“'." Supasranse. It is a | would not wish to carry thom home in ot Which was shapod. 11ke an old fashioned | HEFe 18 a law library, which would do credit | change in the railroad systom, It claiuis on | ar A slight_chango in tho factories, 'Thoy arc a phenouinally bright race intel: | seane, Suusture consisting of a roof | u baskot. i oor-knocker, . To pulled up his gown and | 19,04 chumbars of & great constitutional nd | this ground, that the adoption would be ex- | however, would 'adapt tiewm to this ciass of | lactaaily, and the governmontand - the supporied by iroo pillars, A partof | Saturdsy evaning is the timo to see ATnTn o En A A, MR 0 and | international lawyer.” In these treaties of | peusive and impracticable. goods, ‘and there is 1o doubt but | classes are with the new movement. ceiling "is plastered and white- | the markcet in full blast. Oue cun with bumped his bald Lead against tho gravel as | thirty years ago, the foreigners were allowed As to treaty revision, Japan was willing to | that our Ameridan 'mills can get a lim- | send hundreds of their best men abroad hed; the tin on the roof scems to | dificulty elbow his way through the ho saluted me, and when I told him I wanted | to scitle and do business in :in‘-rtmnlpnrht of | throw her whole country “open to foreignors | ited market here when they are forced | very year to study the bost of other nations, | have once had a coat of dish paint, | struggling throng, He is pushed from to see tho minister, he sucked in his breath 'i’h:il:'mimx ':rlyfll t::m:‘h‘a u(h:i:u::"::t\fi: if this tarift regulation of five per cent. upon | to look abroad for a foreign trade. They will | and they are uot wedded to their old ways | which has been retouched recently in | one side to the other, at the same time and bowed again, He then lead me to the mue .1: \A‘A‘(lmulmwtl outsld 08 NRRAN B :.‘,I\’;:.u;ui:.':«! “u:; \:x‘.lx‘.;?mlnn _mw;:' \‘:.x-"n“ ::.‘T‘.y.“n\.‘.;:;l o8 u:l;m:‘\go::fln 1]|| 1"l:r‘~I¢’:>nlnp\v' | Il'kul y inese. hey have lately adopted | various parts. ‘The stalls present” all | causing his ribs to come into frequent o - - ~ e AL die ¢ she i 2 ado, e' v DUT d. e are Japan's 081 3 0 petric light, and pl e o " y rai O v n pe x . " |} wide front door, and a second servant took | ment. These settlements are called conces- | of laws and to have the cases of Torcignors | foreign nwgm;,m a0 8k ”"ll‘.““”“ parest i L“nu ~||:;|‘xlll;_ H.‘.';»‘.E:;‘.m 1{'1‘|(‘ .‘.I‘t’\ tv‘:‘l:’::\:l;tflxh .‘.)Ir.n-. of the rvainbow, according to the | contact with the many market baskets. | me in haud. More bowing, more breath | sions and they exist in hall a | tried in mixed courts, a purt of the judges of | doors and our factories are in operation. | is a good thing they scem ready for. and | [ASte of the occupantsi but at present | One of these is carried by everyone who sucking, and thon 1 entor tho halls of tho | dozon “of = “tho = loading seaports. | which should be forejsuors, paid by the Jup- | Japan raises some cotton, but isof an inforior | they know u wood thing when they see’it” | 1o whole looks somewhat dilapidated. | gocs marketing and when full is often Auerican logation. What a change! At | Xhere aro sixteon ' forclgu “powors | ancse government, e conforonce, how. | quality. It scems 1o me that forcizn trade | “How wbout their capacity for modern | There aro really throe separate build- | sent home by some colored boy who tho door of our minister's house you | gwi ser of faws and. it own co: ‘rits | ever, adjourned without doiu unything, and | offors the solution of many of the labor and | civilization i ings, each a block in length and furnish- | standsabout waiting for such jobs. By use leave Jupan aud drop down into America. | consuls of each has complete jurisdiction, t::‘t Ao laws Il’x‘.:n:;:l Ilutn’n ;‘i:i-oul:n solng ':‘l_J :'l:n‘l:lmlnr:)-iu‘l'{;{n of the ‘:llntl.‘-‘lhlul a »)\ l:‘un ‘“I'hey are as bright a people as you will | ing three lel aisles, that in the | of the market systom the greater part of J ; i naricels are glutted and the facto- | find anywhere and their average of educa- | centre being the widest. In conse- | the inhabitants of Baltimore are fur- The rooms are furnished in American | civil and criminal, over its citizens in these | tion a pass-port from the Japanese govern- | ries closed for wi ~ g | " govern- [ ries closed for want of demand, vhis foreign | tion, as far as the common people go, is style. A Brussels carpet of a common | POFLs in their relations with the natives, and | ment, stating that I was about to travel in & | trade could eat up some of the surplus, and | higior than in soie of the countries of i American pattern takes the place of Japan. | 't 18 1o wonder that the Japanese govern- | cortain route, and that I would visit certain | keep the mills from resting. rope. Nearly every one of the lowest classes quence the market covers an ar about BOO fe nished with their subsistenc £ I i 1t has in length by sixty feet in | not entirely superseded the *g u gro- 1 ment asks for a change. When the country | places, and that the trip was for health and IAP. % k& width, with the exception of two inter- | cery,” for rel he AN L . ! K5 | : g n ; ces, and as ( APANESE IMPORTS, can read Japanese, As to the higher schools, th, J ption of two inter cery,” for stores on the general plan are N ese mutting, and easy chairs, racks of books | aa barbarous, there was a reason for such | scientific investigation. This pass-port is | “Japan buye Governor Hubbard went | tiere i a lue kool i Tokis Waving about | secting streets whore space is left for ttered through the city, These gen- *'$51,000,000 worth of goods a year from | ope thous: ' } and sevoral desks look very comfortable in | conditions, but Japan is now more civilized | demanded at every hotel at which 1 stop, | on contrast with the houses you have been vis than some of the independent nations of | gnd it is registered at the police station of ud students, and 1 know some Jap- | the passage of wagons and street cars. ally keep a little of eve s | anese lawyers who could hold their own in | These tnree squares lie upon quite a | vege hing; meat, ies, Of gn nations. It sells in round nuwmb bles, and swaple groc iting where & box of charcoal and a fiower. | Christondom, as for instance the South Amer- | every village in which | pass the night. (00,000 worth of goods abroad, and its o : American court. They d civi { Lo PNE ¢ $ AN SR 5 AhavoA. SR 8 A ican governinent, and there is no reason why It (LS AR ey mlm}fv RE ASHOM, BRI Se sl 2::\"‘\::’: ‘n:nll. ffl)‘i“blflml “t-'fu:?;:k;i:f;o:fx: n’)\l]} hill, so that in passing through the mar- | course all fancy or canned goods must wdo o) ths ure. Lustead of Japan- | sio should not bé treated as an independont [ Governor Hubbard tells ie that we buy | than 118 exports. Tiie neods of the nation wiil | Lgecrs and the better classos arc rapidly | ket one ascends and descends a fairly | bo obtained af pla making those ese screons, the honest faces of Abraham | power. The Japanose people cry for more from Jupan than any other forcign ua- | grow with the new civilization, aud an in- | They dre not. backwiard in business: entor. | ¥2eP elevation. The stalls are | things a specialty, The description of Lincolu, George Washington and General THEATY REVISIO tion, “Last year, said he, “our imports | creased demand for our productions will be | nrics and thay pesmerird M Dusinces enter | made up of wooden counters. In the | Lexington market will answer for the rant 1ok down from tho walls, aud over | and a convention of the sixicen powors has | frou this country amounted fo 21,000,000 | the result. Among the chief things It now | nse of e soneemcns & patriotism oqual 1o | neat deparument some have advancod ns | others except that they are. eonduciad the mantel in the place of bonor is a big | been beld here ut Tokio during tho past two | Jupauese dollars, or about 16,000,000 Ameri- | buys are steam engines, clocks, watches, ha's | the Japanese should not become one of the | far as marble slabs, while they also | on a much smaller scale and have not framed photograph of President Cleveland. | Yoars. The foreign mun-us;‘ul n‘m various | can «hlvllnr;m ’\!:flbjlu:.;hl eleven mnfu:u «[nfll and caps, iron, stecl, window glass, sugar, | great nations of the world, and they as- | have rows of meat hooks on the frame | so good an arrangement. Still the As you go in & hearty voice greets you, and | Poers have been the members of this con. | lurs worth of her raw silk, and nearly seveu | woolen and cotton yarns. Its importations | suredly lead the nations of the orient in their | work behind. The floor is paved with | Broadway street market is ab h “ ' vention, aud from what 1 can learn some of | millions worth of her teas. The fair checks | of cotton yarns last year was $5,000,000, and | wonderful possibilitics and in the 8dvantage tficinl A i way cet market is about tho Governor Hubbard gives you welcome with | its sessons have been very lively ouos. Gov- | of our ladies were cooled last year with | it bought half a million dollars' worth of | {hoy are taking of theta urtificiul stone, Along the outside of | same size, but caters to a lower class of the sbake of an American hand, ernor Hubburd's voice has not been unheurd | #7,000 worth of Javanese fans and our noses | wines. It sells abroad about forty different 0 PRk G CARFEXTIR the building awnings are stretched out | trade, In the other places less business ML A in them, and Awericans bere toll me he Las | were wiped with $316,000 worth of Japanese | articles, and some of these will be new 1o L Kl " | on market days in order to cover more | is done and consequently a smaller v > d made u bold stand' for American rights and | silk handkerchiofs. We buy nearly 00,000 | you. In camphor there is an export of a Fur will be seen on very many of the most | space. The place is lighted by gas at | riety is offered for one’s choice. V7hat & big wan he is, and how decidedly | Awerican trade. He has also contended for | worth of Japanese porcelain every year, and | million, and 1u cuttle fish & like auount, | stylish house gowns this winter. cuch stall, w{:no down the center aisle ’ VICTOR RUSEWATERL.