Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 18, 1888, Page 9

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E IGHTEENTH YEAR. = 7 ()\IAHA Sl (DAY MORN l\G, I\OVEMBER 1888, ~-SIXTEEN l‘A(-la. v " NUMBER 157 1\TNISDN BHDS - STOP HERE! Read carefully. Everyitemis a great bargain, and from now on we provose to make Rome howl. Watch for us. Wait for us. We are the restless agitators of low prices. Great bargains next week in every department. Dress Ginghams , Blizzard Cloths Beaver ShanS Fancy Ornaments.| Bergman's Zephyrs Ladies’ Flannel Skirts Ladies’ Kid Gloves | ! B devan Ladies® Flan- Just arvived : pol Skix 100 dozen fine with fan e utto 165 s i Monday we will placo ) y all day, colored o itiop idiei fEw Dyans zat on sale 810 doren fancy Be phyrs broidered with fhney and Ginghams, i Silk Tinsel and Plush all colors, 82 laps to bottoms, also e wes worth 12ie a yaue Ornaments that our the pound. Weo fancy striped AL yard; on sale brown, 54 in. buyer closed out at give youliergemans skirts, with et Monday at wide. They 100 fine Beaver Shawls reversible § great loss. None - goods and not in- quilted bot- 1 blacka, 7de o yard. are only baif | Brown aud ( They are worth $3.50; worth lessthan 15¢ and TQPIBTLEARTY B 2 toms. They Thioy woildbs e member pricc. Mon- | our baye %, clogai the 16t up to 85c ench. On sale give you all you are worth Sh At this is for day — ata low figure. You ean get them Monday, 3¢ ench. Lo want “and . a Tl £1.00 to £1.50. PRI, Monday only yerd. Mond 1t $1.39. ers of funcy work come skeing Monday only Your choice e taKe earl. 44c a skein. Monday, 9. iy Y Monduy at 68¢ oach. a pair, SCHOOL BAGS Indigo Blue Prints GreyTwill Flannels Jannels |GermantownYarns ~ Stripe Velvets P Silk Arrasene Two enses rived by ex- Satine I.Lnll» One day JILALLE) l”.“ Monday only. 2o blue fig L , Chiidroen's 75 pieces fine & UFed: Prats. can buythoso Felt School Diets Pl 75 picces Stripe | h ) heavy gre; ags, with G AAT Velvets we in shor Dhton s oaHie y : N o bought at less lengt hs. 1L ELa g S cots, all wool Mona; N s ot They arc cop nelsat 6 B Tasreas all colors; th pounds finest im- i LS {®ay vem yard:; and broidered in i§ a torrifio ported German- REVeSINGmE AT EhE PiBHoRSHE youcan't buy silk on face 1w Agursion Boa il have them Mono ALY you Clioics i nd are | Bl () otfeach bag, 1 these goods, colors. They are LA 4 r entiro stock of h 10c a where else they usually but we must worth 20¢ a skeing i St 4 ne and rd. On sale less than 18c. retail at 81 _ reduce stock. this is no trash, Néi Thenille, all Monday at SOULESDILLCE, Remember — but best poods colors, 1ic & dosen. ¢ u yard. Monday, only made. Monday 13¢ a skein. Robe Prints. |Red Twill Flannels BOY S HOSE " Huck Toweling Fancy Yarns. ~ Comforters Two cases o % Just - 3 H {J an elegant heavy red Hazen Boyie 100p cooaing only. 8 bales | line of pat- twill Flan- oy . rood :-(»li:l torns, Thoy vels, all wool l‘!}‘l‘:i}“lh'h‘-‘} ing, worth 8¢ 50 pounds fancy Gonitorte are new, Just and worth o L i shaded Yarns in blu They \\'uulll R e BV SICL T R M onds and white: it is a fine be cheap at | worth C. have them et o o quality, but being £1.00. On salo On sale Mon- Mounday at g only one color, w Monday 79¢. uur lm dic a 20¢ a yard. ;’1‘,0_ "‘.‘(;:x’"“‘l“f I\L\lslll‘;l::s ihe lot at / each. % ¢ Mo e ot ilaren’s Plush Cloaks in 1,2 and 8 pair retchen skiet, in mahogany, 4 blue. cadper brown, gobelin bluc, cardinal, and all b one pricay= $4.98 ea ch, worth 8. angry and ordered me out of the room. o N T " Y | und was very sauguine as to the future of his | fractions of ypolice regulutions where th and 1 saw a statement! in a newspaper las N 4 Q, { ng forus. They opened fire on us, and v HOrac Moy THROUGH Tllh TOMO (JOURTS- country. Leaving him we visited fines run from five cents to $1.95 each. m | night of a fire in the interior of hich ATTA I\]LD BY THE ]ND!ANS' wounded five out of the nine. {\_ll ‘|“/l“ '1‘ my revolver and made him BRI Y mon pleas courts have jurisdiction of crimi- | burnt 2,600 houses. It i at Tokio Mzs. Abbott was shot through the arm | Wiitr outs 3 O B IO DS SODRTS nal and civil matters, and they receive from | burns down every seven years, and fires of SRR : o I then telegraphed for Dr. McClelland In cach case the superintending judge was | g900 to 3,000 u year. The appellate judwes | from one to five hundred houses are com- i Over- and the gide with an ey ball. Her [ " 0004 Kearney. thirty-five miles dis~ And a Chat With the Almond-Byed | our guide, and he led us from one room to | et from LU0 to #1000 0 sear and tho su- | mon. When a fire breaks out in one of the A Thrilling Adventure inan Ov I iwie terribly -\lnnlh-lrv‘n)- xhll':; :fl“ tant. In just three' hours and tem % another explaining the whole mode of Jap- | Preme jugdes receive from £4,000to 6,000 per | interor villages of Japan, if the wind is | ° land Stage Coach. orward on my lap and Loug S T e e s BupremeiOourciZustoos: e Justine. T Taamese Judgos are ro. | YeBr. Al of these amounts, however. must | blowing, the town I8 practically gone. - The g was killed. P ltiioistiton withian osors R R irod to dress in Drince Albett coats when | be reckoned in Japanese dollars, which are | roofs are in many cases of thatch. There | MESWoIa i mar Meltiing byliher aidal| ool \l vorth seventy-five cents. \llllh -v e| N wak of, |<l - =y 4 5 ¥ ’ : nified as their cleris, who sometimes wear | and the §4,000 man gets about n,mu, engines w., ,u,.,,, Tokio's fire (,(.,,X,,.U,u.,,lv Pl vded, -” L happened to think of the old man, whlg 5 o | Japanese gowns, but the judges con- THE SUPREME COURT would not weigh altogether the more than 7 paxton, Captain | PUnping. He then commene - | elaimed to be mortally wounded. T tool Japanese Police and What They Get= | 304"t 1y that, they wero thinking of | is composed of twenty judges, and these aro | (W0 American steamers, The firemen of | 1o Which W. A. l:.xf{' e Evetybody 1n the coach w y | the doctor in to see him. Wo found Secret Service Department—Jab: | yqopting robes liko those of the judges of | divided into four classcs of five judges euch, | Yokohama woar biue hats ke butter bowls, Curran and Dr. McClelland {and frightened ¢ we himying on the floor, his head agninss Firem and Japanese England, and the supreme dourt laughed | @ four courts are kept going atthe same | Lheir pants stop just above the knees, and Were Prominent tenderfeet exccpt myself. the wall, with no more color in his face ancse Fir ingland, a l C g f introduced to four of these | their blue gowns have a round white ring iGat onbiuonr oistols LT saldito them: || RRar i a0 oLl ta R Fres—Country of the Little. immoderately when I told them that our su ot one of them conld speal u | on the back, inside of which is printed in Actors. g your pistols,” I s H n a picee of white paper. smo Judg Vashingtou were as careful e o ok fiaring letters.—the SVditohams fire " brigado I guess we'll have to sell out. loosed his clothes and a bullet preme judges at Washingtou were as careful | ord or English. They all wore Enfopean | 1aring letters—the Yokohama, I ) e T A o | e g e Ll OUNORER el ut of thei ¢ ady is of her | dress, and they shook hands after they had AR T e L e oy igiciecubn ihsnayBhangled helrd droppediioihelloonilvhudlsirck i m Carp's Letter. ossos, and their eyes opencd when I told | bowed in the Japancse fashion. Iwas re- s —— revolvers so excitedly and awkardly | on the left side of the stomach, and At ke o s ceived by them in one of the reception rooms | of the Japanese 1s suc n hardly well-known western men, | that 1 was afraid they would shoot each | half buried itself without breaking the Tok10, Oct. 25,—[8 1 Correspondence | them that the {"‘\_‘ S, of the supre: irt and we chatted about };j'_;"‘);;“,“l'lw n pelng S iie hm{*;: while sitting in the rotunda of the Pax- | other. This made mie swear pretty em- | skin, I could put my thumb into the of Tur: Brr. | —I spent a day in going through A FALANESR COURT 0 aws, while we sipped little | (& LI0E fied hibacnis, and theso aro | ton hotel the other evening, related | Phatically at them. With several onths | indenture. But it-amounted to nothe the courts. The present judiciary and judi- 1 told them to be more careful. inr: no blood was spilled whatever. V i even now, is far different from an American r Ott othogmabil) Bhtia tand i i3 ep! e floor, whicl al covere y i aresting chu e sir cial systemof Japan is the outgrowth of | one. lmaginca room, half of which 13 made ed | cigarottes, which we lit in Jap- 3‘\-.‘1;.‘2?“‘.:3 .:f;::'{u.:."“qli.é“u‘:fl‘-'».l‘.;v ooy ;j some interesting chapters from their T Oh M Paxton ) owi conbyonit ubel| Wak seenticonsi aaat Himohotrasias! twenty-ono years, The crude trials which | Upof & woodon rostrum about threo feet | anoso hibachis enbinn cos | Merely . stone box, and the partitions of | eXperiences on the plains before the | gueh langunge at a time like this. hurt. He then offered up a prayer of vrevailed during the days of Japanese feudal- | high, and the other half floored with stone. | Judzes &0 \otich like Stilson Hutching | the houses are of = thin vaper or of | days of the railrond. Among the num- | This protest came from Mrs. . | thanks, and seemed o be a very happy ism have passed aw. Torture is now en- [ Upon this rostrum tho judges sit behind | of tho W ston Post, ‘and another was | bourds which will spring - into - fiame | por wag Hon! Willium A. Paxton of | It was the first evidence that I bad that | man, as he didn't want to be killed so * tirely unknown, and hauging has taken the | lttle tables, which are” covered with the living likencss of - Judce Cooley of ;: 8 ,‘,',“;‘. R fl,.-.::gwm:fm'm» 0% | this eity. Mr. Paxton, as is well known, | She w ive. Meantime the old man | far from home. Place of hari kari, strangulation, crucifixion | €loth. In the common pleas and the p - | Michizan." I spoke of the immense rambling | i 825 i d'tho coal ofl lamp are the il | assisted in the construction of the | Kepton praying, and the conch fairly [ Dr. MeClelland said he would have and decapitation in the administration of the | iNAry courts there are three of flll'm‘lu‘ro“ :'mm-ulfi:ng ”\'L;d ’cmm“l 1)uul luminating powers. The lanterns the or- | b, ~'11 Rt Gt o ; flew over the ground, although the in twenty minu more from catlimanalty t Mhaso!ls ol morel whinblng | The Audgelisitaiabithe e Sapanese bolces a Poley ool o hat | dinary paper lanterns ‘which you seo at [ Pocific telograph line, whic o horses were pretty badly shot. ight. d often heard about people RULERBRN s MORD IR NOISORO WAIRIE | ¢ sht is the prosccutor prose- | i istmtion of fustice than i fine buildings | American lawn fetes, or squarc boxesof | by Idward ~ Creighton. als Ilooked out and eould not see any In- | being scared to death, but hardly of witnesses to make them testify. ‘The | his right is the prosceu or prose- | ministration of justice thau in fine buildings | Amorican lawn fetos, rachpxesiofilov. L e Dain o L PGy eontoL oL Freuch law has been as far as possible | cuting attorney, and at his left s were very much interested in th. | olled paper stretched over @ wooden frame, | freighted from Omaha to Denve X ians coming. - ved it ¢ 1 . Here, how= S =¥ ° » | supreme court at Washing! vere | in which a lamp or candleburns. Thelamps | },ujlt o portion of the Union Pacific rail- The old driver, who was ealled Dan viLs o : o g of adapted to the Japanese wants, and one of [ the —clork. All ~threo bave little 8 AEL DR y and lanterns are placed on the floor and | 160 a"® Dliving the years which ho spent . e e the supreme justices of Japan tola mo that | baint woxes bufore them with brushos | 5oty the president in rank. about them the children play and the Sty | on the plains he met with several thrill- | Rice’s circus, had by this time sobered | - Now about the telegraph operator,the the code Nepoieon would be the law of the | for writing in black the Japancse characters, | gurprised that so mar 3 8 woro | LI e e e perd | ing adventures, ono of which occurred | up. and his companion, u tele- | top of whose head the driver had said, empire. The courts were established with | and no stenograpuers are used. - Close ub o | old mea, and toid me that the twenty judges | e notmore fires, and when fus remoemberod (| (G B EEE K00 s e o T »h operator, had started out pretty | had been shot off. He was not killed! the beginning of the new regime in the latter | this rostrom, in the pit below, there is o low | of the Japancse supreme court ranged from | )eq'or Japan, and that the fucl of the | *Lshall never forget the time the In- | well londed with liquor, and they had | He had heen hit with an arrow., and. in part of the sisties, Now Japan has more | rat'ing upon which the prisoncr places his | I0R (0 S WA STUES, OF RS, A8, L OTO8E 10 | country i o a large extent charcoal, the | dians fired into the over stage kept tilling up from o bottle until'it was ng to pull itout he had twisted it than one thousand lawyers, and it takes Is and looks up ut the judge as h each of the great judges sucked in s bres danger from fire is appreciated. The ordi- | whish I was o passenger,” si i empty. around and thus loosened the entire top 1,500 judizes to preside ove . She SLOIDAL A0 Aonia JCr HID oy and bowed again as we scparated. 1t takesa | IrY Jupaneso smokes a pibe and the fact | 1oy ,” [ remembor duy us [ Suddenly the conch stopped. Theer | of his scalp. He was the bloodicst man hias 1,000 men who st 98 Prosceuting. ut- > Cxtramo back of the room one or two | BTEAb 1 e e e e o st w2 | ifit hed ooourved quly or was anotlier guleh to cross. 1u I ever saw, and wo all thought he was torneys, and her Judiciary department con- 4 W for the accommodation of MANY OLELED The bowl of o Japanese pipe is not bigger | Was twenty-four about half a mile from the spot where d until we got him into the stution. tafns 1,700 clerks. The minister of tho ju- [ VIsitors, and upon these souctimes sit pris- [ 10 run those fapanese courts, and tho elick of 4y the bottom of & thimble. 1t holds abouy | ton then went on’and - relate we were fired upon. T leaned out of the McClelland patehed him up and, ag dicl ) t with t tary of state, | 2UCrs waiting to be tried, pe . | two puffs of smoke and it is usually made of | lowing story: window and said, “Dan, what’s the | I afterwards was told, he camo out all @10177- 188 & Acat WiLh Uh ALY OLRHND, THELE 18 NO JURY, ~of tho building. Some of the clerks wear | o8 or metal Tn 1863-4 you remember that the matter?”’ right the sceretary of the interior, the sceretaries | and the judge oxamines the prisoner himself, | Japancse gowns and others dress in European $ g i . 4 0 " A (T ) Y. MeClel A H i o Ay R DS E 8 | iand suedudzeloas D L e HEInt brliat e ana ain THE BABIES, dians weré quite troublesome. They Give mo a dvink of whisky, Paxton, | De. McClelland made an examination AIREARGIIY. MG AR B AR QL BREIN | pula sl ouiver, | paint instead of pen and ink in their bo But the smaller a thing is the better the | burned up nearly all the ranehes on the | or I never can cross that guleh in the | of Mrs. Abbott’s arm, and assured the R ! ! il ke 1 the documents of the court a anese seem to like ace road between Kearney and Denver and [ world, lady that he could save it. He took parunont of justice, ranks next to thoso of | 1 NIGCUCh S dare wwith handoufls on thelr | th ords are stored away in green oile e their fondness for ancse | had that big fight with the soldic t While T w 'tting my whisky bot- | charge of her, and brought her the war and navy in the number of its cm 15 wird with their arms tied tozether with | Paper covere that may be take smaller than ou id their | Julesburg. We freighters had to drive | tle for him, I said,” “Dan, this lady | out all right. *An n on ployes. 1t uumber of officials is as great as | ropes, which we so bound around their | QUL uickly in cuse ol fro. Thoso clerks kol | craciliko eyes drop littlo tours” whilo their | Gur teams in double file. and escort them | down horo is mortaly woundod, is worth ten thousund arms that of our treasury at Washington, and it | waists, were these ropes into the | fro ; d the prosecutol ky little voices ary out in the lai > | from Kearnoy with eighty of our own And this little operator up here has | of.” That's is about what the The | 3 receive from £300 1o $2,200 a year, b ch i © same the w ) LAl i ) 4 AL bas three courts to our one. rts, The hundeufls wero then taffen off | receive from §10 to 2,200 u year. bydom which - the same the world | 1,0, 411 well urmed. 1 happened to be | got the whole top of his head shot off,” | doctor suid, when I asked him what he and Jaid with the ropes on the seats while t THE POLICEMEN 2 in i ok canala T ranlia, added. 4 SV r ¥ b o [y . THE DEFARTMENT OF JUSTICE trial went on. As faras 1 could see, the | are paid from seven to fifteen Japanese dol- Japan 1s a ('n,\lnl;‘_v of l:;n-ll:'lm The u’u-u capl mll lll‘\ulllw ,‘} *““ T.’ HH\-\ ;l»h \‘\" hl‘:‘l :“ Ix'“::.l I:“g:‘.‘ ;:!w.m'h,d. Give me thay ilu'»:lhhll about the case. I1 he Jm’h;'; . 5 Sture TN T so tried to got at the truth, and the' trial s a month. Phink of “the dandy coppers re from five feet to five feot, six inches | sovera o skirmishes ho In- | nervine, quick, wounded persons were only sligh 18 8 rambling struoture of two-story houscs od $0 bo 1Al f the Brondway squad” getting fve Ameri ¢h and the women are smaller. Not dians, but no one killed. In Octo- [ handed him the bottle, e took a | hurt, united by long arbor-like passayes. It has ) visit e which we do not dollurs s nonth, or a dollar and a qui ding the fact that they raise themsely ber, 1864, I was on my way from Omaha | big drink. The next moment ho whip- 3en. Holliday came down that night 3 | ) i I beautiful gardens, and a wide drive leads up | have in Amevica & man is arrested and board themselyes. S three jncaes off the ground on their wooden | to Denver with the freighting outfit of | ped up his horses, dashed through the | from Salt Lake. He was chused into to tho main entrance. A8 Udrove up this in | by a policeman, e is brought to this court | are tive thousand policomen in Tokio, aud the s Tpm continually looking down at | Rinn and Dick MeCormick. I had [ gulch, and soon we were outon the open | Plum Creel by the Indians, rikshn, the Japancse ts at tho | and the pjudge looks into the evidence for jority of them receive less than two 1, and_a fair-sized American girl towers | /"0 1 A SR P i LR ARV CD X dposnd o O'Fals x,m ]‘I:n‘ll .(4];,. |«“] Nn;n xl d ,. HIIVIL.II o (| G LS. F Thoy soem more orderly | above them like an Amazon, Japanese troos I.IAAILVU"IVl]‘I xlm\?:. At '\ul;lr‘ 'y Ir“'lh [llv.llvlll{ A.uin Hlliflill‘lh A ‘\"M]fi i : Noxt morning I st: e out "u l’lll 'al Aoorbant themaclves in sslutation. Thoy NO LAWVERS than our American poli and their littie | are dwarfed, and in fact all nature scems to | taken sick and had to stay there for a 10 stage rattled on atalively rate, | lon’s with o) Wa got through all went down to the floor again and again as I | g:0 employ v 1t is Just a preliminary ex- | Japancso forius are not half the size of those | be made on the six by nine plag. or two. As soon as I felt able to [ the four horses being whipped into o | vight the next’ cvening, although we presented my note from the state depart- [ amination. There are a number of such | of our ofiicials. They dress in white linen e L bl travel Istarted out by stage to overtake | full gallop all the ¢ime, Every moment | were fived upon by the Indians, who ment of Japun. Thoy wero all dressed in | courts, aud thoy might rathor ba described | duck during ‘the summer, and theirnatty | qy o e mSE RSN teadn, which w ing t0O'Fallon’s, Iwe expected the Indians to give us an- | tihat night burned several ranches, i ) lor ey consist of little cubby | clothes a D O « ] y Wi - hy B¢ The fi G HASSE) cr dose, o'clock n stage ca we J white duck with brass buttous, and thore | 4% oftices, for they wonsiat of litle cubly | clothes arr fif‘n::\"‘.‘fl.“"...n"',f JoDhey weiar | e with théis bobaLls ook 1ke kiitens | The overlund st e d At v fLothor doso. : i 1 oelock n stage camo over from scemoa to o o messenger at every cornor as | PO IS LD of b MSEUR WELDIL Febie i | ears instead of bats, and cariy long swords | (b Nid with our Awerican tominys, and | £ors and the driver > started out in | Meantime the old man kept on pray- on’s Blulls on a dead run, and 1 went through the departent, They prob od with urson. ‘Tlie didge put all kinds | swordsmen. and the policcien have a drfi of | the horses aro ponies. Tho houses of: tho | £ood spirits, and nobody anticipated any | ing. when @b dvew up atmy camp the solis ably got 8180 or & a woek, and they have rehing questions o b, anicomparcd | fenciug, wid Tave to be proficient in the use | common people are bat one story, aud the | trouble, as the had given us o | Fortunately, Captain Stervit M. Cur- y passonzer inguired for me. When more limbor bicks than yon will find in any | 118 answers with those he had give 10 tho | of the foils before. thoy can go on the force, | Fooms look like children's playhouses. The | bricf r at locality, ccupied a | ran, who was stationed at Plus we up | found he was the busband of Amorioan skin, sked in their b h | poceman, Amc the evidences against | When they arrest a man they tie him up with | COuntry, though as big as several states, is [ piace on the middle seat of the conch. | with @ company of the First e Mus. Abbott, He d me about hig ATAGRK $, et | the boy were pairof sandals and a pair of | ropes as well as handeuff him, and instead of | full of picturcsque scenery, but it is the | (hy the front seat, fucing me, was a lady | c I r v fiving. e at s, and 1teid him she was comfortas a8 they bowed, so that the noise soundod ancse stockings, which the boy said did | grabbing his shoulder and pushing him to the | Preuy rather tnay the grand, and you have | 4, 05001 v one in'the conch. | Her y | once sent ont a squad of cavaleymen 1d heing well cared for. He waited like o un whistle while I passed through the | ot belong to him. Phe judge unrolled | stavion, they drag him nlong by the rope, beautiful bits rather than sublime land- | = ) 3 > it A Tt o 1 . . b ation, they scaves. It is the same with evoryihing. I1f | Was Mrs. Abbott, She was on her way | who rescued us and escortod us into the | but a minute, and then ordered the various buildings with an interpreter of the | them, and taking n..m‘um. bis hards jumped There are 80,000 of these policemen in | peates par &fl‘l"[ e A i‘;’ tea | home to Georgetown, Colo. Beside her | station driver 1o whip up his borses, and away epartmel 1 v kotowed ag and | do 0 tho pit besido the bo; d” bugl apan, and apanese o o) 8k for 8 oup 4 L 0 de teg 940 220 ' f * A A % d i 408, 5 department, and they kotowed ag id | down liito tho pit bosido th boy and' bu Japan, aud the Sapaness police system 18 | ,5uys iy i handad 10 me in & LS piece of un old man, who was very large and curried Mrs, Abbot in and put her | he went. ) K u in every eled them on the boy's fect with his own | organized after that of France, , sgoiy in every instance. hands. Ho then further examined the boy e detective force, and the spy sysf shell like china, Do bigger than an egg cup, | fleshy. He was ccowding Mrs, Abbout . The doctor---he was an army Mr. Abbott, who was then a wealthy Our first call wus made on the acting min- | and evidentiy thought him guilty. If he de- | such thut the government is kept very well | 80d the littlo Japanese beauty gets down on | consjderably, and made her quite | contract surgeon-—cxamined her and | miver, was three 5 from Georges aster of justica. As I entered, the mi cuded 80 the boy would have to be tricd in [ posted &s to what is going on politically her little knces when she brings it beforome. | noyvous, So I asked him to give | at once concluded that he would have | town when my te ched there, the guido and myso!f, put our haads on our | Opsu Ot AL ucthe would bo frecd. :",‘.'.‘x“:‘d".fl'l'::‘.,'"yq-.,“,".“ Yolice ‘stations are | A%, [o% the Jubgues moath te) 4 ks | hor & litle moro room, This ho | to amputate herarm, She felt torribly | Ifis clerlc s m, and meantime TUE DI TENT CQ lcattore ¢ 0, and a he corners " knoos and doubled ourselyes up in Japanese Phe Jd Py % Fon ~ 3 < which hold one hundred cigars, The farms | did, and she thanked me. This | over this, and said si.e would wait until : and then the minister offored me his hand | comwon pleas court, of courts of appedl, and | dressed sficers sit TThose avp inspectors of | den patehos and very small garden patches | as we were going iuto s gulch. It was | at once telcgraphed at Georgetown. | town uind Plum Creek, In thirty hours Ho motioned me to & seat, aud chatted much | Of # supreme court. The court roous of | police, consizbles, and & commigsioner-in- | B that, and as for little babies, which are in | a bright starlight night.,” The moment | The doctor, however, insisted upon pe My, Abbott made the 845 miles, roach- more froely than does our own attornoy arious courts are all about the same, | chief.,’ The latter teceives about twenty- | SOUFSe of tine to grow into liule Japanese, | we entercd the guloh I began to forming the operation at onee, and got | ing the bedside of his wife ut 2 o’clock e 00 o trials scom 10 bo wore by cross ext | seven hundred Americad dojlars per year, | J0U 800 more of them to the square yard | ,;eq0y " Tt looked like o good place for [ out his instrumenst. M Ab- | on the second morning after she wag general, Mr. Garland. Hus smile was more udges thun by lawyers., There | and the constables get from i% Lo $14 per L‘:,’fh"'"" Say ot ):‘:?Koa “c".“u."'.fii,'.‘,’:“" Indians, and a mighty poor pl for | bot wept bitterly when she saw that | shot, SMtxnodivo thun that of Garland’s whon told | an appeal courts in Japan, aud each | month. white folks. I kept my eyes peeled to | the doctor was dctermined sbout the Abbott is a poor man now, him that wa consldered the Japanese the 50 hus from seven to eighteen judges. THE PIRR DEPARTMENT T — the front, to the right &nd to the left. I | matter. I asked her if she wanted to | F aral yeobs aftor this incidens Americans of tho west, and were glad to sce ch of the courts has its president, and all | Is under the poice, and Japancse fires bura | - a, b TN TR T QT Aaat B ¢ 50 BRGSE QI Y BRA MANSE paress SO0 | J e 0 jinted by the M ‘'oughs and eolds came uninvited, but | was looking for Indians, an didn’t | wait until her husband came, and upon | Mrs, Abbott uscd to write to me. L Ahom atwempt the overthrow of the orioatal | {HfiK#%ne dbbeinted by the aayiado.and for. | down mare houses than thass ofmay ather | o 00 A et Pheaa. With & | Bayo 1o wals long o fAind ‘em, We had | her replying. that ehe aid. 1 1010 the | went o see them At Gaorketowa o low for the christian civilization, He talked of | §3) 1o $500 4 your, sud there is o branch such thut when & fire breaks out houses fall iuw doses of Dr. J. H. McLean’s Tar | got into the guleh but a short distance, | doctor he could not cut the arm off | vears ago, but they had moved to Leads e lnprovements I the Jupanese judicivry | of (bis court that deals with the ia- | like they did i the Chicago contlagration, | Wine Lung Balm. =25 cents & bottle. when I sighted a party of redsking com | while I was wround, He became very | ville,

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