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- - e w— MORNING, JAN OMAHA, SUNDAY UARY 27. 1880, —SIXTEEN I EIGHTEENTH YEAR. ; . Thousands Will Be Sorry That . 10ur Great Fire Sale ‘ 3 Cannot Last Forever. NUMBER 227 s =3 To-Morrow Your LastChance To get some of the Greatest Bargains from the Greatest Sale ever held in Omaha. 502, 504, 508, 508, 510 South 13th Street. i The Bargains we quote below cannot be duplicated after To-morrow, as that will be the last day of : the Fire Sale. You can easily see a great saving of money by purchasing at this sale To-morrow. LADIES ' DressGoods Silk Plushes| LINENS. | CORSETS. |Kid Gloves. yjpderwear, Hlroilie PR Every yard of Dress Goods from tha | Every yard of Silk Plush, in Every | AllthLinens from theLogie Fre Sock | Every Curet in onr Stre Tt Canc $100 Worlhof id Gloves tht wo Dot EVf;lVlgflSll%gfifir}‘&'l'ég'%;é‘”g‘fl‘]:lfluhflo““vfi = ! Fire Must Be Sold To-morrow. Width, That Came from the Must Be Closed Out To-morrow, fom e Fire Stock Most Be sl au of Losie's Sk, 15 007 A1 the Ladies’ Undorwear Must Ba | Vi B i LD BT i e Clesed Out To-norroy. ate all gt Wl o Wil ofer T[0T onow, ey T | At 1 C At 58 C AI 10 TONTOW in twWo lots s i i worth up to e, 71 These are all the hest goods, and are | Was in this stock it was marked de. c At 170 Al 212c All the very finest Imported English Sateen Corsets, 50c; worth $1.00. Al the fine veal Kid Gloves that I.u;:h; e Fire n had marked %1.005 they come in AlL the Swiss and Hamburg Embroide- ries that was marked at Ge to Se yard, I Bdzings that have heen pemorrow Le yard, Al the best quality A1l Wool All the B6-inch Wool Whipcord 8 carlet Underwear from the Logi ings in this stock, Come early, as they AlL the heavy Unbleached Cotton Crash Al Wb (ool s and colors; embroidered back or |} will go fast. be put on sule To-morrow at 2 ey at Al the 3G-inch Henvietta Cloth from A‘I 33(’1 = ” - All the Dr. Hall’s Corsets in this stock the fire stock, black and all colors. Pl All the plain white All Linen Toweling at 5903 regular price $1.25. All the very hest quality Kid Gloves| Al the Yarns from the Logie Stook that ] AlL the 40-inch All Wool Billiard Cloth, rkailinges AL the very finest Hamb AR e N 3OG (M8 At TTe i i ' At25c At 9c At 10c. Si; from the five stock 5c; was ogie’s stocks Gloves markél up to | yere marked at 10¢, To-morrow 4c. sold To-morrow at GSe. from Embroide- ¢; worth up te Be. 1 Plaid Suitings that are worth upte 7 e All the finest quality ALl Wool Imported Towelings from the Logie stock. Dr. Hamilton’s Perfumed Corsets, | ‘ At 2 8c Tricots, all shades, ——— shoulder straps, short hips extra good value at $1.50, To-morrow 77c. 3 " et All the very best grades of Yara from 3 ® At 5 Al the very finest All Wool Worsted e Logie Fire Stock ed | AN the fine Swiss and wide Hambu S iGEtyor e Double Fold / s 3 i 2L Worst the Logie Fire Stock that were marked | 4 X 20¢, . a——— All the Towels from the Logie stock ——— e All the hest quality s from the s e g 2l - At 5 Oc Togie fire stocky nof damazed af all, Ge, | hat were marked as high s 12jc. A' 960 I Ifl Ai I5 ; Your choice from the flnest goods from 1 Yery finest quality imported French the fire stock, including Fu ipes, C / 2C Coigets, all hramds, and Best Dress ' o vor . ) ks e d L A 4 - | 0 e A b very rted Yarns that All the very wide Hambuw Cable Cords, Invisible Checks, Silk Fin 2 Al the very finest Childven's and Misscs? [ All the very finest, Impor H. "“'{“':"""':‘] Flouncing that were m 2 and Swiss cd mp 10 50c, ished Henviettas, marked up "to $1.00; All the hest quality Spool Sewing Silk, All the finest All Linen Towels that Form Corse’8 of tynerican makes; worth ! 431 “yyool “Worsted Kuit Mitts; were| Wwere in the Logie Stoc all at 50¢. at 3¢; former price was 10¢. were marked as high as 25¢. up to $2.00° | marked up to 50¢. them damaged in the Teasts | “THE FAIR” J. L. BRANDEIS & SONS. ' I“AT\‘ESS them with blankets, and then they aug holes and wind storins prevailing since Friday AL o | for rifle pits. They were Cotermined to es- morning, cape or die. They had been disarmed, but © BThe weekly bank nent shows that the still had a fair supply “of ammunition and ) reserve has inei 005, The bauks rifles. The women, by stealing out ut night, | now hold $2),01 a3 of legal red S Q 7 | peopie to help the poor for God's sake, but | to a christian life. Tt would be far better | sonage.and a power for good €in that com- “'lu) "0(;9~ \ CRI‘ A’”‘S] OF ALL lb CllARlT\ that they must necessarly show how selfish- | for people to put their hands in their pockets [ munity. The sense of loss will there be N 05 S ness gains by chari “The motto of Chris- | and give to charitable purposcs outright. | qeeply and generally felt. For twelve years tinn charity is, “Help the poor for God's | I3ut this nnot hope for in the present | Lo has suc ; i n of a ssfully borne the st 000 in suke, because Almighty God era of religious development. The rank [ large and critical church, critical as churches . 3 The Virtuo Considered With Rela- | mands i v supe and file even of the ehurehes hive not been | in ‘a college town are aptto be, and now | The Once Famous Cheyenne Ohief | jusscd gu ammunition in 10 them, quiremonts. 'y wealth has been given as acred trust; educated up to it. To m this state of | Jeay, despite the reluctant consent of his Revisits Fort inson. The hour set for the outbreak was in the S ion westward is now having a tion to the Crecho Ball cause Dives canuot with impunity d uirs, to sugar-cont tne pill of iving, to | churci (o part with him. Notwithstanding ort Robinson night. Suddenly they fired on their guards, | bo Wl railroad men st Lazaru : flatter” and cajole people into eharity, the | the respousibility the Targe and 1 —_— six 0 number, killing or wounding all of | Leaviest now that it has Do Dean Gardner, of Trinity cathedral, was | churity ball was invented, T would not church of that city 1mposcd, and vigorous : them. Then they rushied out and, driving | this period of the season 4. | RUMINATING ON HIS DOWN FALL. | tcir’ women wnd children before thei, |y ouge a couple of tri to John T day morn r coat b OPINIONS OF MANY MINISTERS | (i calica upon. 1 should think,” he said, | that every man who gocs to such a ball is city had | fop and ¢ efforts required to keep a breast ofits cxpe ry woman o sily coquette, and y tions, Dr. Thain's twelve years pastor the little_valley of | g0 1oV “that the christian ministers of this : i * | too much more important work to do than | that both alike are rcorobatesin Christ's [ has been to him an extremely hapny T U O S T e e PR R T Prevailing Sentiment That Rev. Dr. | (5icciss a qu stipn that hias becn, settled a | sights bt Tao most heartily believe that | ono, and “to" tne chureh Y caifyihy | Story of the Desperate Battlo in | some mountains and bad Tands about ton fnoictishe sonpdorsiatitho Lonnblouso HEoR yotweiler's Denunciation Was Kil- | thousand ye know I have. I have two [ such a ball is no help to christian growth, and | and iuvigorating. ~ He leaves = a e 8 o i roann ol 'S Foonn. ¥ Mimed and Unwarrantod - much actual sin th contend with to devote | I wish that no one who professes to love our | strong, activ “.(,,.ff”m' useful, and hurmo- w ","'h lvilu Band of \\1}1 riors fore tho soldiers could get out and overtake “J“ly: .Im;nIAJI.‘”T)’;:;‘ m:;} any time to this matter. I haye nothing to | Lord would attend.” nious church, Although this church has Was Wiped Out of Exist- them. yhoR mployerin Othexljitoresting Xeolis: say either againot the charity ball or the in- | ey, John Willums, of St. Barnabas, said | been favored with the pastorates of such G 155 b eanrison arougsa byition e lerie L Louisina, Just overtiog, ious News. augural batl, nor hay 1y quarrel with the | that he thought the clergy could find greater [ men as Rev. Drs, Horation Foote, Flavel promptly and a hand-to-hand fight {fundbnetin e advocates of cither this question. I | evils to overcome than the one of dancing, | Bascom, Pres. Jonathan Blanchard, Rev. Indians began. Mauy of the Indias 0| “Bifvato: information has bocn rocslvedlin ‘ NS do not care to talk farther upon the sub- | which, for the greater he considered | . T. Parkins and others equally able and A Famous Indian Fighte m.’ fotted, and 1t \\A‘N \m;\\\u'\h v, '( Sqatgliniorimnoniinelboeniracalygdiin L4 3 il and snow was marked with a trail of s it ouncin arringe o « vly connected with the press of 0w of San krancisco, o 8 pean belle.§ it is that when a young | brilliant, Dr, Thain's has been the longest 1. K for: Omiha, buy le‘;-” BB MaGaxt) 156, Phil harmless. Tru ¥ ev. P. I, McCarthy, of § hilomena's, | girl1s allowed to ow hersolf i » | pastorate 1t has enjo iat the Kountze Me- | )0 A R ) € girlis allowed to throw herself into the | pastorate it has en) from their naked feet, The scene > the other | rible one—the cries of the wound vt Ronixsoy, Neb,, Jan Many Ministerial Minds. i, In a sermon deli e ball was a fail- | s w error, - b view of the matter. | qrms of licentions men; men known to be Besides his Galesburg pastorate, Mr. | to T Bre. | —Wild Hog was | ¢ | prominent morial church, lust Sunday evening, Dr. Det- |+ Dancing in itseli,” ho said, *1 do not think | |ibertines, which is the case at too many | Thuin has had but one other, and that of but | day and took n good look at the old post | i of the guns wnd the yells and shouts of Advices from Okluhoma to the effect ng, although cirenmstances n R s a few years at Dundee, Il The church at the combutunts commingling. 'Tho troops | )0y gy itehes sent out from poiuts in Toxus balls, then there th one? saved his life, Most 1 that the C guard house wh woiler sta d hard and the Tndia ling the, or expect iving aceounts of boomers 5\ afew days that place, while having no’ hope ong | it so. T dancing witt: proper music and proper atti ild Hog is dead, ana so did 1 | could not ure and gave his reasons therefor ; ‘ ward rs holding cing s | When tho co d liquorisdrank ( properly done was harmless. “There is oné | tiou of kecping him long, were extremely | People think V ch the Badlands’ or mountal 4 2 other things holding that duncing in the | 4 or course, immoral and improvers but | Primes” said Mr Willama, “for which S | 1oath to give him up when o sied to bo ro. | until he turned up here fat and sleek tho | made a stand in a vaving boinge drivengantroliharaen yRiby il sacred name of charity was a mockery. A | jn the case of the Creede ball, the people | Detweiler's sermon will be universally con. | leased from his charge there, that he might | other day. He was once famous all over the fere the troops surrounded them on every D OB LEORIR IYOrD N UG RNL GRS, number of the christian ministers of the city | who went there were all ladies and gentle- | demmed, and that is aseribing to the ladics | become pastor of the church he has now left. | {nited States, and millions of neople talked | $id€- Captain Wesscll's Third cay con- | circuluted to croate u sensution, have been seen and talked to on the subject | men, 1 think, and knew how Lo proper present’ at the Creche ball such motives as | Dr. Thain 18 & man whoso public hfe touches | i Bubied it ATORS of people talked | queioq “the fizht, assisted by Licitonant | Ahe report sont out from Chicago to the during the past ¥ and their opiuions | duct themselves. There is one cl fondness of display, admivation and news. | Socicty at many points, and as a_trustee of [ Bbout him daily und looked the firstthing in f Chase, of the swric regiment, " The Tudians | effeet Ut tio Union Pacitie bad to conoiude B ot e e diversitiod us the | M. Detweiller's discourse that, recalled to [ yajer pufls, Although 1 shouldn't atlow a | Knox colloge, an ex-soldicr, a public lecturer, | the morning at their paper to see where | fought bravely, but would not surrendor. | 10 abundon the reduction in the differential B i & = my mind most vividiy a remark wmade by | bl to be given for charity under my char as well as his oflicial relations to some of the | Wild Hog, the Cheyenne chief, was, and | They wanted todic fighting, As thesolidiors | between St Lovis and Chicizo s it applics colors of the rainbow, Judas, and that is where he says that if the | [ think that if these ladies wish to devote | state societies of christian benevolence, he | whathe was doing. wade sud havoce in their ranks they closed up nts from Omaha and - N Rov. M. P, Dowling, S. J, the affuble | fine toilets and jewels of those who at- | tho proceeds of the ball given the other even- | will be missed in Galesburg, and in L1inois. [~ pha other day he sat, solitary and alone and fouglit on. Is pronounced orronous widont of Croighton colloge, was the first | tendedthe bll had been sold and tho pro- | fie fo aharity. it s well snough to. Jot. Shom - = the sidesalls 1o front of the wiieamr rhon | Pinally there were but a fow Indians loft, | dho A& Anerion olorann = ber of the clergy scen. *There seems | €0€d8 given the poor it would have been bet- | go'so, THOSE KANSAS HORSES. s k in front of the oftic auar- { and these d 1{1‘.'.”“;,;h:”.‘w‘hm\ .;..m“” f.‘:."'.“ DAY "‘\‘;:V Joau s 'm‘”\' \h;;h: i house, | soldi His | nition) and 1 | el Men, womed i i sheet, | ou and Wild 1 ssued writs of replevin [ and wrapped about his shoulders, past. Al had ter. You remember, when the wise woman | © Rey. A.W. Lamar was secn, but didn’t care ters, gazing, sadly, at the old guar with costly | 1o discuss the matter much, 'The members | The Coroner is Finally Called Into | his mind busy with past memoric @ not better | of his church, he said, were supposed to be the Oase. thin overcoat,made out of an old urm, nd the money | converted, and while the ehurch does not | Coroner Drexel $ 5 some people | egislate against dancing the members are word for telegrams between Eugland and Americ the revenue of the company has in- ased 17 per cent, while its traflic decreased per cent rd on them until the last one and children were wine s band was a thing of th to the happy hunting two extreme views in this matter,” said { was annoir he, “‘One party maintains that dancing, in | oils, Judas itself, is evil, und the other that, though it | that the ointme en to the poor. There i the feet of Je nanded why it w ts be sold be wrong in itself, jt becomcs justifiable | & e STy SE A : f e o o sweet charitys. sake. . We do | W0 quick to condomn, and~ who atand pre- | not expected t attond such partics, vesterday morning in the case J. Z. New- | flapped sadly in the wind, and | grounds butold Wild Hoz, who was locked | The son of a former Polish count, Anton ! s foEa a0 SN S 188 it | pared to condenn anything, 1 think these |y 0y Ui Zakner, of Al Saints, speak. | C0W dEainst the sheriff and his deputics to | he scomed forgotten by all the | up in the guurd havse at Fort Robinson. One | Sadowsley, stepped off the steamer Himburg Do not hold that dunclig, [ itself, is ihicits | dadics deserve all eredit for trying to estab- | 0o the subject, said: »Danemg, amnid | £t bossession of the stolen horses which are | world excopt o squaw who trotted | hundred and seventy-five dead Indian bodics | last Stnday at Castle Garden. e had na attendinl it, U may become sinful, for in: [ most all things, ~occupying middlo | fuls and the surroundings of the charity ball | Frazier, commission morchants. .. | new stood reverently behind the great man | “How Wild Hog got out and got off 1 do not | Flugh, an American young lady, who hid stance, on account of the peculiar kind of | ground, There is old Latn proverb, Horeon w‘m A AR 0 I'he horses were stolen in Kansas by Ed- | while he d the otd prison ana cumi- | know, unless, like Sam Jackson suid of the | met him abroad, arvived with an order for dance indulged in, immodesty in attive, which intorproted means, ‘thore is viewo i | B U Gock not need the attractious | Ward Walters, it will be remembered, and | nated upon an exciting night ho once passed | battle of Bull itu g 1 was the only | moncy enough 10 take him 1o Troy, voluptuousness in action and the company | moderation’.” L ) auiractions | ©o o o M aslo City, Crri - ‘ man left alive on the battle ficld, I concluded Sl 43 f Sihe : S ; . : f u magaificent | taken to the Magic City. A few days ugo | there ten years ago next winter, when the ! j FE with which persous will bo brought in con | Rey, Willard Scott, of the St. Mary's avo- o 3 3 MBS HIS LIFE A BLANK, ¥ fact. 10 1 on uccount of this dunker, Which | nus. Congrogational” chure sa it s volMll . that =~ motive " into | the alleged owners of the animals demanded | Calanus is root frozon up and tho wild onion | ‘o Guier day the once great chief looked — seoms o be ineident to some species of dane- | thought the money reccived from the Crecho | o the sl iy Tl e tagine, Who | the possession of seven of them from Deputy | remains stubbornly imbedded in the earth | sad and forlorn, and may have been a mite | Belease of an i, that the Catholie elerg wenerally | bull was so much dfor charity, “So- | any eredit for having done an act of charity | el Lorkoyouivken who had arrested | waiting for the gentle spring to thaw it out. | hungry, but nobody invited him in to cat. 1 sery discountcuane round danee: What is sin- | clety and the church aro not. so distinct us | thr They are too intelligent for that, | leass the horses unth ne gets nis roward. Ha | . It was Jan h Wild Hog and | hever kncw u case of such fallen greatness | William Pic 15 probably the Lok Ol horson: ouy be darmless for au- | ono would suppose from the sermon you re- | They simply weat for an evening of innocent | hus recoived $130 of the 5230 offored for tho | bis ¢ braves, their wives, bedding, | €Cept ouce, when an - cx-president of the | gldest convict in the state in the point ouhier, uwing to their diffrent | dispositions | for to. The question is & very broad ouo, | pleasure und diversion. with the expectation | capture of the thief, dogs und lice, removed to the Indian terri: [ United States asked we to split the Kindhng | of continuous pennl servitude, suys and charictor, Itis very difticult to aud although I advise members of my flock | 0t wetting back the full yalue of i1 AT A i tory. Growing unhappy and longing for the | Wood, while he went for a bucket of “voal 1o | o Tt b HORNALO lish any vereral law, or to suy absc o turn the 1l b blé & & o P A alue of the price The replevin suit was started in the county " ) ging L 3 e J . dispateh from Auburn, N. Y., has been i ) 0 turn thoir minds as much as possible away | thoy paid for it The term -charity dall” pleasures of the war path, e “broke out,” | Make @ fire iu his stove -8B, thut all persons may dance every spe from such things, I am not inclined to put ) fopth sorm v ball'™ Is | court by James Beck, a colored man, and B ari, s v 4 S8 = discharged from the state asylum for dunce, or that all must abstain from. myself directly i the wiy of this formidaple | ® misnomer, if it is intended to express, in | A. B, Pierson, marsbal of Wamega, Kan., $ing bis warrlors and their wives ho struck JUST A MINUT insan umnals, but has not” yet been Tourcation oltogoter. Tha icimbers of the | thrioH directly o, i i for D¢ | any sense, the motive which induced people | who claim that the horses belong on New. | Borthward through Kunsus to southwestern L &_ArARN li% BigHroad Rlata DAL i Ciitholic ciurch are counselled (o ook and | orank but rather to jump on and steer. THe | to patronize it. - Charity is defined a8 “that [ comb's ranch in Wabauqsee county, Kansas, | Nebraska. Itwas a lively trip. The United | Noww of the Saturday Eve KOOI IR A0 COM, SEAIROARRALI § ollow: her advioalt or i tonfosns | staLom STy iivs “gineal 1o | which is bestowed gratuitously on the poor | Newcomb is resident, of Rocliester, N. Y., | States soldiers “followed closcly and kept [ b ] 15 of his lifo bohind the p o it M ieetor” peauetfessor | scitishuvss in order to abtairi gifts from the | for tneir relief.” No one, I fancy, will 'pro- | and instructed Hoek and the wnarshal 1o seb | them moviug on forever, but could not over- ndepsed, the muvder of his fati RO Kllows tho eircutistances . of n | the members Of iy khiron diono Jast - yons | end that what the patrons of the charity | the animals and rewrn them 1o ranch, | haul them, The tie-up on the Atlantic avenue street | was sentenced to life imprisonn 4 individual case, ho can more 1S [ e memione.ot ] Gl Rlone Ias Yoar ball gave for the privileges of that ovening's | Another reagon why the deputy shorif wili [ | Wid Hok bsd some = fun o [ carlinos in irookiyn, continucs : Auburn at Malone, Franklin county, BaIHN) oM, Be R moe oARY « \ orld Y qya | entertainment could possibly be construed as | not give up the possesyion of the horses, to- | the —trip up, for ke killed about | Inspector General Kobert Jones dicd ab | Ayg A o e Lt acnt il ¥ e wuin point which | ways unkuown 'to the world. The | ‘phar p the possess forty ~citizens, outraged ten women, | Fortress Monroe yesterday mo AL\ L U A has not re- ard, is hat | and burned and destroyed over 40,000 worth | Phe Union Vacific men are reported still bad young men of | dissatisfied with Cushing, and troubic is #ot W Fort Robin- | prodicted They attended the ball knowing | gethier with the m that h plus of receipts would be turned | Geived the full amount|of the re he, but that could not have | he paid #50 freight to the railroad company | Of Proverty. - He says th of their going. They cannot, | in order to seize the stock hunself, and as | the band did it. W the Catholie chu serve ho dungero h has in view is to pre. hundred dollars received fr dred do! e rom the | thatthe ove childrea from mortal sin lll_ld from | Crecne ball is but a drop in the bucket On.,‘m the oceasion of siv, and individual | compared with the immensc amount of | beon the resen: pre with the « tion of his teansfer to the asylum., the prison show that 1% circumstances must be the guide as to 0] give @ Poot by e ¢l i o ot aeron b 1o atherfde, 88 10 | monoy”glyen the poor, by the “cturltable | and, “as ' far, a1 mow. a9 | Beok ang Piames o e nnarasy | 800, Whero ho lid to surrander to koo from | Pt werut and Grant smelting works are PArLieulin forwon or u digorous. occusion of | heotin ostihs Sy, & think Mr. Dotwoller | not’ claim for *themselves the *siightest | nim - for thoas ‘ehdrscs, iho dop. | DeibE captured, he hud 20 warriors, woie & new building to be used for roast- | teneed to Auburn for life when he was sin. If cne hus not the courage to avoid an | question, und that he 1s Luble to get run | JccoEnition as having done a charitable thing | uty still holds. ' the equiues, The | #ud children, 700 dogs und an unknown nuwm- | G000l 4 matters, o sixteen years of i He was brought in swelling the proceads of that evening, ged owners also elpim that Mr. Stryker | bor of millions of lice with him. He and his | 70 (500 0 T G 0 petiy | 0 the eenteal depot by Supervisor occusion where sin is almost certain to fol- | g or d low, how will he huve the strength not to [ Rev. Dr. Duryea, of the First C ‘The profits were turned over to the mana- | believed that Walters 'would be sent to the | band were confined i one of the soldiers 4 1 it N ow, he Lave ¢ ) o uryea, of tue First Congrega- | ) i ers woul ent to the it . > | Journal and L' Autorite, of Paris, nave been | Grant and an assistant from the asylum { fall'wio sin if o' throw humself into the | tionul chukch, said: 1 nover intorfore at gl | EGES of the institution for which the entor. | pemitentiary on the ‘charge of stealing two | barracks next to tho cuard-house u-long, | J0EG, o QTN in time to take the 6:65 teain, his des- tai other horses and that 8 *(the deputy) would | 10w, rambling log building. Willard asylum for the ( ding ent was given. That money simply A % ) e Chippewa Indians have appealed for | tination bei p council of Baltimore | with anything of the kind, as a general prin- 0 dionishes pustors aud parents to warn the | ciple. 1 think it is cheaper and more stralghi | Fepresented what the attendants ut-the hall | get o bo owner of i horses 1 Walters | Wide to induce Wild Hog to return o tho tion wgainst the whites who are tre hronic insaic. Much of his past life I young st the dungers attending balls | to give to o o AT an e e e were willing to give, not for Creche, but for | could show that the ppimals were his, and | 1n¢ 2rritory and be a good boy and 90 AEALANL LU0 WG 2 AKRAIGN- | ORIOIIG L1k ALUGR. OF I8 Dddk.EhE dungers attending valls | to give to charity out and out, rather than to X 4 o et | sugar, coffee, nuts and m other good ng on their is 4 blank, and the sights of the outside that evening’s pleasure. Many undoubtedly | Mr, Stryker did think’some of them werc the e for that what they would not ha property of Walters, Beck and Pierson he itself. There | stated that they would remain in Omaha un- 1g | til they could get possession of their stock, \ and dances, und not o allow them to be ex i do 8o indire posed ceessurily, but still "it does not { of amusen abs y forbid danicing of every kind and | tate to other: ed Burkheis: s saloon of 1 througn the aid of any kind t. Butldon't pretend to dic I merely teach members of wtender in | world are strange to him. [t was queer bis life | 1o see how he gized at the engine as it i came pulling into the depot, He manis things to eat were offered him as an induc: ment if he would go back, but he said he would not do it. ~ When pressed upon the | with a dos [ Eiwven at all to the Cre being no harm in the amusement of danci under every cicumstance, Some of those | my congregation the priuciples tha Y J s or Who favor charity bulls seom 10 ignora | re Fiehee and leave Uil G L Lthink | o conductod at the ball, 1 am unuble o' con: | and said they would have their rights, g0l mad, demsed the Unitad | " Benator Nesbitt is credited by well in: | foaiqPUINAK [hio K6 Cepol, a0 Mans | altogether whether dancing in itself | make the application. 1 have neyer | 4¢mu either the entertanment or the be. Just before the writs were served it was | Stal vernment, and said he would lick it. | formed submissionists with the passage of [ Whivh was the fest he had eyer soon, is vight or wrong, aund seem to | been @ fanatic, aud never utter these | SLOWal of the profits upon the institution for | stated that Mr. Stryker had taken the horses | - The government became alarmed and tried | the Lindsay bill by the sonate, b BTV S R s AR B g it be wrong | useloss tivades against social custom. 1 1 | Which it was heid. 1 fail entirely to see why | and had goae to Sarpy county with them to | 10 lock Wild Hog up, and then thero wus o New York papers are frothing over | ' L WU S00K Of A face Becinod { omes hormi when done in the | think peop'e are doing anything really havms | PEOPIc should become 80 wrought up upon | evade service. Whether or uot this was true tme. Some of the guards were killed, but t from Zanzibar that the Geruians | 10 Bive wiy to that of amazement, { 0 0f clarity object for which it is | 1 point it out o them, and then try to | ihis matter. A re sprehensible thing-- | remains to be seen, but the deputy could not | they at last got Wild Hog in irons, put him Y AR GAUBRAE JaAK | Picrce served twenty yeurs in the ! done does not change its nature and to hold | an thew from it by ing them some- | ON€ thut should cause every honest citizen's | be found around the sherif's oftice yesterda in the guard-house, and the government prison, and w transferred to the asy- ' Vi uld Miake them advocatos of | rto o, [don't believe that con. | 19€€ to grow crimson with indignation und | The coroner went to South Omaha and | breathed freer once more. His band wag [ In the debate in the reichstag yesterday, | [ NMaveh 2, 1850, 0 few days after it prncilwhich they falsely uccuso the | tnual seotding over did, or evor will do apy | Shame, s the education of our children upon | served the writs on the commission men, and | BOW appealed to to go back quietly to the [n- Af Germany wants tropical |y completed, Since that tine he had ¢ Jesuits of meiutaining, viz.; that the end | good." d the wages of sin, paid over for the purpose | got possession of five of the horses yesterday | dian nation and make no more trouble, | countries she must keep East Africa | ey, 1c of that institut As ; fustiges s, Soue of the advocatos | © dov. W. J. Harsha, of the First Presby. | Y the saloons and 'prostitutes of the ¢ity. | afternoon. and they said they would not. They were | nury Wobster, head nurseat the Cooper | porn @ [WiRALe Of that fnstitution. A | Of churity Lulls Iikewise estimate their first | teriun church, was found at his residence on | Here are foemen worthy of our steel.” —_ then barricaded in their quarters, deprived | yoyital, Camden, N. J., wus murdered while | 147 48 18 kiown ho has o friends, and gesent o eharity by apnealing | Twenty-ith avenuo. “As & general roie” iy Sloux Falls. of food and water, and tho gavernment BOW | on “duty on the fourth Hoor of the hospital h;‘u never cor .\|u“‘wl. d wih way ona s They su o good! | said he, 1k the ) raise oy by 1 V. 9 ast, e d starv 2 " since his ing ration. ¢ s sixty-si ‘ are aduinis oring to your own pleasure, | they come o, They involve un. lumense The receut acceptance of the call of Ply- e recently convicted and sentenced to @ | starved, froze and went without water, but Carroll county, Iu, commit ’ e and burdly think that the christian people of 0 of nard work, worry and annoyanc wouth church of this city, by Dr. Thain, | Je&r'S imprisonment in the government peni- [ would not give in one inch, shooting himself through th Annie Ford, a mutatto, who lives at 105 i Omaba will admit that charity is 80 dead b ey Yoyt g rminam occasions the loss to Galesburg, Ill. of one tentiary for stealing letters from the post- At last, being rendered desperate by their Nortn Uhirteenth street, is violently insane, oL bt there is 10 lobir AGY Uag 0f ARELug th6 | fofbies au vaudsiod by no erolop lealousies, | occasions tho joss ialesburg, 1L, oftice, were taken to the Sioux Falls prison | sufferings, they torcup the floors of the build- | Despatchies from Yaakton, Chawberlain | and was placed in the county juil yesterday | N ad ¢ | who for years bhas been & commarding per- | last nigut. A iy barricaded windows and doors, covering | and Sioux Falls, Dak., report furious suow | morning,