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v THE OMAHA I 2 N year, ns the anniversary of that day rolls | mon wore seen lamenting the fact that o beor | light-welght cliariyion of #he world; Joo Mc A SAND HI U8 LOGIC, ()Pl‘ D THE GATES OF Hh“E\ l Jed” they burst forth with wondrous | keg which they hud hidden therein had mys- | Aulifte, the biie' Galifornian heavy weleht, ekt . ™ a ‘ Bt ahd gty o fitting typo of that | terlously disappearod and they were gather- | and Australigh’ Murphy, who = recently | He Found the Tight Wood Knots so : Slessed resurrection ing solace from a large, black botttle | whibped both The Woir and Tominy Warren, il by 3 e [ AT the rosca~-theie fragrance was nover | Theso aro fucts, and dre not complete facts | will give an cxbifition b the Now Grand T L TR o teny) sweeter than on Enster morn, and_they open her, for the writer was too disgusted to | opera house newt Monday evening « 120 two Georgin attorney oo i The Saviour's Resurroction Yommemorated | sveuter Shaft ol FU T "oae "confident | procecd b2 il o b traveling on horse on the *circuit” in For a good spring medicine wo confidently | Hood's Sarsaparilla {s prepared from Sarsas {n Local Sanctuaries, joy, as tho too, would praise the | =~ The first prohibition marshal was dis- | Wallopétt the Clev. that sta Their route lay across the recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla, By its use | parilla, Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Juniper Muster for the hope He has given the world, | charged for drunkenricas, his successor wis . Lovis, At b, —[Spe m to | sandy hills that form the northern boun- the blood is purified, enriched and vitalized, | Berries, and other well known vegetabl [, Abt The flowers praise God, no matter | unsuccessfully roquested severt L WAE | un Brk.]—Tho Ohicago Brothe team | dary of the Altamaha, ono of the dreari- that tired feeling 1 entirely overcomo and | remedics, by & combination, proportion and PRAISE, PRAYER AND PANEGYRIO. | how janled o out of time ourTicarts fas b | B! featdenco portion b town, and finally | Wolloped the Cléwlanders today. | fest streams in the world, says the New the whole body given strength and vigor. | process peculiar to itself, and by which tho : [ o oty O onal chuseh, i | Watrants wore sworn out and. served by con | gl York Herald, Tho hills about it are ns Tho appetite i restored and sharpened, the | fall medieinal valio of all the fngredients R ety Hight refloatod from its mellowod | stablos : APd&mlinr Case. bare and desolate as the Arabian plains. digestive organs aro toned, the kidneys and | used {s scoured. Hence it possesses superior i custom, The license beard of 1888 met, heard remon- Drs Moise& Ta, April 6.- [Special to | After this sweeping assertion it would liver Invigorated. If you have never tried | aud positive curative power, e . o8 " . | windows, and contrary to_the usui : i Decorated Chancels, Crowded Audi. | WECowR, SIC OB SR 50 e, the white auted two saloons flconses, met & | Tug Brr] e stats bonrd of health | b “surplussage” to go any further, It ) g toriums, Devout Worshippers, E { nephtos, the durkc red jacqueninot, futer. | fow timds and then followed thefr prede- | i having its - atiention called to u few | hos been said, however, that you “niiyht | Ood P f quent Discourses and General mingled with the p|,:1‘.p(\u1 ’,’\‘:..H,:;:::Hinl:v\: }'y;:‘r:::“vh““ “.\;:‘1.\»‘:.;.;,. |‘.\:h 1“;,.';' l':II:II':Y‘!‘: cuses of khugurious disease, undor | plant a Yankee there and nhe wouldn't url Ies . . | dainty lilies of th Worship of the Most High, | Stiins ot the fow | soften the outlines | the only_floral de imstances, At Dil | £row,” which is more sweeping still. N ‘ rYor dustr; n 70! v 1d ) L opidomic of Siph | o blado of gria to. tear fte hoad | sarsapafl”a the Blood above the ster soil, sory spirea were there to | quet or base ball, to disburse the £2,000 ob- | rather peculiar . cf f chanesl snd balnstrade, | tained from the saloons. In our police force | lion there wAs! ‘an Jonstration beinz a singlé | not much improvement was made over 1857, | tharia, the schools wer i erossin GCNeist is Hisen,” joyously sang the birds, [ bunch of pink and white blossoms which | and in the matter of strects ool Yt (e sithe ) ‘ thio rows, thiushes and mokdow latks to the | graved the Hiint of the pulpit littlo advance was made. The two parties | “l 1' JDoard mnmounced that the teachers | "1y vng 'y painy, gloomy day when our o 8o this season, Tt {3 a thoroughy honost | Evory spring for years T have mado it & blito # P v i Bastor du: However. & At whs fucking in this ex- | had fallen into the delusion that the grand | could either contluue teaching ov close their | fyjands struck " this benighted country, ul reliable. preparation, purcly vegetablo, | practice fo tako from thres to fivo bottlos of .'W BRSO S U EVALRY 4R e vocd but _unenduripg beauty was fully u:u\ only object in life was to meet after | school The teachers thought it | and after traveling many long miles and containg no injurious fngredients what- [ Hood's Sarsaparilla, beeause Tkuow it purifies Christ visen,” whispered the g u i‘.‘h\‘_lhn_\v.l s cloguent sermon o »-\'!.w‘ nu;! ‘-*lu'\ ,!“"_‘Hj"“*l'"l (lli"v.';.».lm\ better to respect the orders of | ywithout secing sign of anything human, ever. Thousands who have taken it with | the blood and thoroughly cleanses the system s WAl Uis Risew'from Paul. o anttul but | - Howevor, ut tho closd of 1880, wo: find bust. | the Socal board of - health , and 80 | they wore grently rejoleed to discover | benefit testify to its peculiar eurative power. | of all impurities. That Tanguid feeling, called rang out the mellow chimes from the Trinity |t wasa siniple discourse Snot rantul but || Howevers at e coqe of |G W U PHC | closed the sehools, but domanded bay for the | wmoke gracofully nseending from the “I take Hood's Sarsaparilla as a spring | *spring fever,’ will never yisit the system that tower, and “Christ is risen," pealed the organ | Fangeish Gon mreec A SEARCE RETORNG | advent of small towns all around us, not u | Hiet OF the term for which they were Bifed | ehimney of w eabin—un il shapen, elum- tonie, and I recommend it to all who have | has been properly earcd for by this never- and sang the choir. It was o feast | G i GGG *'of the mists and | vucant business house ov dwelling n town, | gidiciEn G sl T TSI TR sily” constructed affair, bt neverthe- that miserablo tired feoling.” O PARMELEE, | failing remedy.” W, 11 Lawkescr, Editor of flowers— flov on chancel and pul- | Gidows that have always hovered about that | two places where liquor may be obtained and | (eie g ™ coion b refusor S offa cubin, 340 Bridgo Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Agticultural Epitomist, Indlannpolis, Ind A ; wages, - The teachers refused the offer, and : polls, pital an choir, flowers through all the | sweet old st The congregation wis an w,]]nlp;\mm\'v-l\'I\Hlo(luul‘ll(ximwl ¢ wateto | INAISE0 (it Chey Some ntitled o Tull” pa, it 14N Va0S dismoutted . and ontered) | ! ceupicd, and spavkling eyes and beaming [ and noted, Tts” effects on veal estate 11 [ 1R co i 1o WWEr SHYGHRA. 0, TRUIEOf) | tHia ¥orhAlan moss) MkHen ThacrLy o | a oses P | ehrch i flated out throniel e open dooes { 1y folt al pieces of property being aces wall attested to the fervent interost | L theirs that the schools were not in_ session. g and windows. All over the city the churches | grees ) e HE Nad awakened in his hear- | now offered at 30 per cent less than they were | qaeit® FAdn FIe Schools, werd B0, et court | the hearth. In one cornera baker's | s and spring styles filled the streets, lightful pecinlly Mrs. Squires' solo, “I Our business men and all dependent on | "y ehor poculiur case is at Anamosa. A dled. On the only hed in the room sat o p | Know That My Redeemer Liveth,” which was | country trade stand almost solid for high | young man attending college was exvosed to | Woman, a tall guant femal with huge N. B. If you decide totake Hood's Sarsaparilla, | Hood's Sar. 18 s0ld by drugglsts, 81; six TRINITY CATHEDRAL, is 156, whilo the oppor bunches of uncombed red hair. On the | do not be Indu, , pathetically and beautifully sung. I 108 were to buy any other preparation. ' forgs, Ireparcd by C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass, 1 | sweetls the diphtheriacontagion. His clo Through the stained windows the soiten 5 largely of bankers (whose hary | ; ) f | ¥ > 1 AT KOUNTZE MEMORIAT 3 X e 4 | sent home for washing. A little girl played | only stool the cabin boasted, before the | light follon a congregution which packed | 4 e cross entwined with vy, lovely | times), senfimontaists .’l““:'“.‘ll"j*"“(‘”::,}I"‘P"'.'r’ | around the washtub and was exposed tothe | gpate GNP 6L AbARL N Bt | = —_— e even o aisles and vestibules upon bund e | oo ‘i gt profusion and of Awcetest | 1l G idh Tot i fime synentevory duy | Mnfectcd steam arising from tho cloties, 8o | whivering under the malign influencs of | TENED HIM OFF years ago when he held an inguost on o was tuken down with what the physician of fair faces under marvels of Easter bonnets, | fragrance, fine music, the sacrament and an tr ¥ N vo fac 4 ), . , A the 4 an | (Gl bo Sunday,byeand bye,” Those ave facts, L LR UTEA I Dl 5 ; | — young manh who had lived for years with upon sthe white robes of rectorand choir, | eloguent, sermon by Rov, J. 8 Detweller | eold, unsentimental facts, s angone who will T ‘..,'.l\v'\;f.f\':f:x' Ty jood nmorning, my friend,” said one | A Boston Debtor Adopts Heroic Meas- 1 penholder firmly imbedded in his Upon: mydads. of llles and . toses WhOS | gy, All about the pulpit and organ | take the trouble to investigute can verify and it spread, The wholo number of cases | Of the visitors, with his usual politencss | SR n. A verdict inaccordance with the fragrance burdened the air, and which made | o oo banks of potted plants, lilics, voses, | LRest e od is now twelve, with four deaths, all, | and uvb “0ne of my ereditors, a big, fat, strong | medical evidence was veturned, glorious sunctuary and altar, pulpit and | evergreen decorations and banners bearing | HATGUEboWE the SUIte au Sanesid 19 WD 1 it s thought, being duc to this original uct of Mornin’,” was the laconic reply of | shoemaker, ‘was purticularly obnoxious Sige - choir. They we banked over the altar like | such mottoes as “He is Risen from llnil A" | on the ihove subje Give fucts and figures l‘dl‘A'l\'.\\lll.N. his host. The conversation which en- | when I was in an embarrassed condi- MALINGERING IN THE ARRMY, - 2 snow-white halo, They peeped out from | and “I am the Resurrection and the Lif i compacet form—Ed.] SR, sued gpprouched a rather surprising | tion,”said a Boston merchant to a Globe y g i : the green of the smilax which completesy | ALl this unusual displas cr,remen- AT PAY OF HO climax, when our friends fled precipic | reporter, “for he wasat my house pre- [ A Civil War Veteran Draws a Leaf ; Y | hrance and reverent celebration of the A Live Little Town. SSpdn kel St hiE BUUHTES: G fourtimes AniiH 8 Noto Dook weloped the carving of reading desk and | o0 cpucifixion and subscquent resurrees | Overtos, Neb., April 6.—[Special to Tnr e Have Ac- | “UR {ERRbbR v 2 A el L e L L e o ) : ailing und - they breathed out their perfume | tion, in contrast with gay kaster bonnets | Beg)—The village of Overton is built on an Fine situation you hyve here,” re- [ dayand often the samo number of times | The army surzeon soon began to Look upon fr ont lappel and dress front in every pew. | and bright colors everywhere, formed an im- ¢ A g *Qedne quired a Competence. sumed the man of law, blandly. during the evening, He made me tired ) the menas machines. It was his business toseo \];”1”(‘ "lim.“ ’n.«‘r '.(1..:"- were 0 "lm‘ll}”l‘ gl b B G Yeligions | Cminencein the Platte valloy 20 miles west This column, Boston Advers “Pine h—1! What's it fine fer?” and I puzzled my brain for a scheme to | that the machine worked properly: but who At 11 o'clock 3 I Lo | Worshipers ives more serious -attention | from Omaha on the Union Pacifio railroad. 1t | tiser, contained a statement recently, | “Why, T should suppose you would | get rid of him, tnd the opportunity to | g¥ehleal of nachine expresiiie opinions public, in a few minutes there was nct standing room. TheRbeautiful service Was | quy than do the Lutherans, It is one of thei read, the chants and anthems were sung by | most sucred celebrations, a the cathedral quartette, =the surplice choir | could be so appropriate and the supplementary choir in such a way s | of the Lord's supper. is seldom heard in Omaha, Dean Gardne Much 1ste was displayed in ar- sermon was ancloquent effort on the text: | ranging the floral offerings. An’ arch, be- “Let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon | neath which rested the pyramid of plants and us, and the variaus offertories and chants | flowers, and from the center of which was \ rendered with the usual sk cled the | 48y and night, has furni; s 200 inhabitants. Ttis the trading point | imputed to Edward Eggleston, th 1 for alarge and thyifty farming community. | is no American author who r 1 us such nothing | Ninety-five car loads of stock, grain and hay | income from his writings. The state “Then ye'd s the administration | o “gpinpod from this station during the | ment at thut timo seemed preposterous, [ Ye cain’thunt ‘cepn’ thar's somethin® to | he would rim out of my house and never | medical staff bein aal that the oh- first three weeks of March. Two thousand | for,ns shown in this column, there are | hunt at, kin ye come in it again, The morning that [ | ject and end of the soldier was to play sick o tons of hay, 600 head of horses and 2,500 head | many American writers who make excel- |~ #No; thai's a very clear case; T | referred to he came as usual and pre- | andshirk duty. Of fat catile have been siipped from here | Jent fncomes stom their writings. M. | thought, however, that. being so near | sented his bill. T was busy inn room I | o 1015 true that the surgeons had canso wthin the Bt v e 5 "tama o | Eggleston now rises to explain, and after | the river you could find plenty of deer, | had fixed uy sort of *den,’as it were, | for suspicion. - After a man has been § ady sent him in there to § eheated halfa dozen times it is the most to the obscrvance of this holy | ha tthere | fine excellent sport here, hunting and | get even with him came at last, dives an | trapping.” 1 knew that he was a coward at heart | upon the men as machines, but he regarded “pose a dang lie, stranger! | and I resolved to make him so td that | them with suspicion, the belief among the ipt. And not only did” the surgeon look wi il of the | suspended a snow white dove, en 3 L oF | roundly abusing the newspapar men foe | Still, if i b e it | End thesiana ! 3 = & e - Seaia o LU | oround feed per month for western markets, | roundly abusing thy pap Still, if it is not good hunting ground, it e lu rldy cathedral choiv. Mis, Cottons solo, "IN | pulbite At one side stood the evoss, while | So Bundred ind twenty-iivo thousand st | their Tack of’ brains, precision and | iy fine place for cattlo raising find me. i A A vorthy of commendation, | were pakmes and lilies and vines, Y | els of corn have been bou},m. here since last | mental training, goes on to say that “She be, be she? L'posin’ the cattle = Well, siv, what is it?" Lasked as he | Set ‘.".‘I\."" men as swindle It was T Sn JOIN'S EPISCOPAL. The choir at this church is composed of two | Ogteber. e i hee | pHnleeRlly did say was that “he did | gits in the swamps en’ the danged river | came in. HEabio how Jqul ke, pottigsic ‘ion assomblod | 1ady vocalists, Miss Frances Roeder being [ The bridge across The Platte_threo miles not know any author who has acquired | rises on ’em en’ the cussed fools don’t git | ** I have come for the amount of my | fire became quenched in the hosom of hero but a few weeks after leav- iting with high In less than o ot kissed - the “”.{"’,fl‘,m', }:x‘!;\:g‘l,jfi;i"l,,'f"{',;,?'L‘.,";‘.;‘,‘,,{.,,‘,‘,L',‘,, a competence by literary work, properly | out of the v t drownded? How | bill” he replied. many ess and turned the bridgo over to the county, | So-called.” This is certainly quite a | ye goin’ to am then, hey “‘And,’ ‘said T ealmly, ‘T shall be | ing ho Thiis will materially increase Overtow's trade | modification of the statemont as fivst That is certainly very bad,” assented | obliged to tell you that T haven't the [ vesolve to do orc from Dhelps county. Last summer Overton | quoted, but even this is not covrect. “Mr. | the indefatigable aitorndy, “bub thove is | necessary funds to liquidate that bill.’ BA lavge and devout congic at St. John's Episcopal chureh on nc Mwenfy-sixth strect yestorday morning praise the Christ avisen, The’ pretily little church was beautifully decorated with a peo- | #nd o duet. v en’ the alto and Mrs mme, in Alfweller the soprano. 1dition to the regular ted of one or two solos C. Knopfel presided at Ly DI to | Theit proj service sing month afte our | fusion of florul offerings, The chuncel was '12':1:f.'5|'n|,fll{‘\"‘n»?«hlll;‘\ul.'m“' low sang, “God’s | 4,5ii¢ a fine two-story brick school house at a | Longfellow was a professor,” le says, | one comfort loft for you.' If you have | ***Very well, si,’ he answercd, “I'hen | siered soil of Vieginia theve were scores glmost covered with cut. flowers ond plants. | ™At6 a. m. thers, was n' sunvise praise se- | €08t of over & 000. A Methodist church is | *nd made good investments,” But My, | not the richest soil nor the best hanting | T shall be obliged to inform you that I [ of men who appeared fo he in woful Tosc, | tulips, hyueinthe nd, lenton MU0 G20 at 10 the pastor prochod fron this text, | Bearly completed costinge sLM. The Bup: | Longlollow continued to write for years | ground nor the greencst pasturage, you | shall sit’ down here and wait until the | Pin, but whose iliness was only put. on, music of the surpliced choir. “Risen with Christ,” while in the evening the | 8 1,“”_;1 e it ”m‘m‘;_-“w WL | after he ceased to oceupy a chair at Har- | have what is better than a monareh’s | bill is p: nd put on, too, in the most surprising "There were no especial in the ser- | Subject of his sermon was, M1 wmn-the vesur- 1, FOO TR R KO Fown and a | vard college, and what” proporty he left | diadem or tho highest nicho in the | sVor quistlyiibugitol| INSIMLILMAlyRIbe 5.4 liore we vice sive the celebration of the holy com- | Fe¢HON £ wzo0d, enterprising cluss of people need not go | Was mainly acquived through his copy- | temple of fame—you have health!” [ tell the truth I ghly elaied, for | at least four ‘or five men who wero, munion and the choral servie 3 L L ER L e furthe rights. Mr. Whittier has certainly ac- “The douse T have, stranger! Do you | here was just the opportunity I was look- ostensibly, unable to stand e nd Tour * Doum and Smart’s Easter an- | The fivst object which atiracted the atten- z = quired what is for him a competence, | see them ler complacated brats thor | ing f they walked with slow and painful steps them, “The Lord is My Shepherd,” were | tion upon entering the church was a large Notes From Ord. and by his pen alone. He lives thelife | in the cornder? Them's got healta, | Hesat down and placed his hat upon | every day from their quarters to the sur- beautifully rendered Dy'tho choit, ihicl I | cross ubout four foot high, made of beautiful | Oup, Neb., Aprl 6. (Special (0 Tuk Bor.] | of a quiet, clagnt couniry sontleman. | Baint they? Thio old woman thar, o | the table, Whon e had dono thie 1 | #eotis.aivd from the surzeon’s hack gain g pLtlio best, surplicad eholrs 1n tho clty, | Nl Eos e e e ailing | —The Exchango bank hus wound up its bus dl ho necds and gives much in | hain't she got it down fine? 1o look at | called to the landlady and said: “Mps, | 10 theiv one of them oceasion. 5 3 and inmedi front of the pulpit. Oua | Mess here. A. Blakestad, the proprictor, has | chavity. b v me, with this here cussed ager shakia’ | Robbins, Lam at home to nobody foday, | 20t @ d the discharge in I'he rector, Rev, William Osgood Pearson, | stand at the ri the pulpit stood a large | returned to Wahoo, his former home. SMr. Howells” says Mr. Bgeleston, | my bones to jelly; you call that health, | and do not wish to be disturbed uider an cach cuse worked. 1 sudden and radical delivered a very impressive sermon, using as | vase filled with ies, while the pulpit Operations have been begun at the west end | “has had, let us-hope, a liberal editoria’ | don’t you? | cireumstancy You may conre in to- | cure. M lingering, in fact, soon beeame . But before Mr. Howells made | Lo | find | 50 common that not the surgeons alone | Lok here, my friend, answerme | morrow and mail what letters you his text, *And their words scemed to them qs an idle ‘tale, and they believed them not.” | sp Luke 2411, | lowers, both cut and pott 1 about the pulpit and organ, filling the chur | with their fragrance and bringing ling wus twined with ropes of swilax | of the city on u fine residence for B. N. Mitch- ikled heve and the : not on the sick list s one [ re- on T closed | but even the me looked upon every form of disei of many methods of “playing it member when the fivst min died, the i ve with roses, Other 1, were nged | here on my writing dest.” at- | and locked the door, and _ stripping up some Dilliard cloth T had \Fed present_arrangement with Havper [“this. If you can’t get ar ings a | here and nothing to hunt, ifall your « N | suflicient competence to enable him' to | tle drown and your family ave stk all n will proveabless- | own and oceupy a mansion “on the | the while, why in the name of common | it —into every erack, lenving no : i X water side of Beacon street.” Mrs. | sense don't you leave? Why do you | place where ait could get into the room | port was spread about the camp in this Stowe has certainly acquired a comforti- | stay?” 5 £ & orout. Then I drew up a | upparently unfeeling form: Thoro 18w ble competence with her pon. Gen. <Oh, well ight wood knots | looking document, which I nup at the hospital playing dead, Wallace is popularly beliey 1 .~.‘m<-m},.‘.-m.»v young fellow who af- 5 stifl leg, which for months he ftor him wherever he went, it for o whold day’™s thing cll, assistant cashier of the First National X v bauk. Bros. he had acquired by his wr The wheat is u in this section of oo | country and the re witiful springtime |5, ¢ ¢ favmers hereabout T'he declamatory contes of Ord’s high school took place last Thur evening in the Baptist church, The fivst prize, a gold medai, was awarded Miss Edith X Robbins: the second, Holmes' poewms, was | made something from the sale of more wwarded Master William Mattley. than 500,000 copies of *‘Ben Hur,” he- To SN R ides the incomeifrom his other books, | Mr. Reed GERMAN LUTHERAN, The little German Luthe wentieth and - Mason str the door. Rev. B, J. Free and delivered asermonfrom a manner that entertained b excoptionally well The wis made up of sons_ and daugh- {evs of the congregation, and their singing was very mueh appreciated Holy communion was partaken of by 150 persons. The decorations in the chancel consisted of oulk leaves, Toses, eve 1sand a feast of all sorts of fluwe T'he seriptural portraits were appropriately decorated, and the room « had a very cheerful and fragrant appear- w 1 church at | 15 packed to @ was_at his best Thess, 4, 14 congregation mind thoughts of the | and the loly Easter festival. The congrog tion began to assemble Joy was de picted upun ey L grectings | und expressions of good will were heard upon | every side. Even those se sombre re- of the middle ¢l lass case the | d to have | ave so ‘mazin’ handy.” will,” which I took malker would see, and after w 1 Reed's Boyhood. few notes [ went to the chandelicr s boyhood was not, eventful, | turned on il four burnors, All tha | and once Jie dragized d and fitted | while previous to this the big shoemaker y mavch. - This lust feat was - considered h school, | no doubt thought that I was biufling [ proof of his disability. Iis discharge was made out, and thére soemed nothing « death, joined in the gene The pastor, Rev. 12, the service and delivered a very cloquent sermon appropriate to the oc io ks | 3 The singing was joined in’ by the entive | Palmer's clothing store was burglavized th Hopectar | 21though, pevhiaps, Mr. Fegloston would | Ho attended_the eity schools IBPECINL 1 ish to plead Gerieral W we's salury | for college in the oy as minister to Turkey. To be sure MY, | under Master Moses Lyford. As a | him, but when I turned on the gas | b, and ¢ ! v 4 ! . . 2 Sggleston’s gencral proposition is cor- | youth, he was quict and studious, a good | could see that he was beginning to fecl | 10 stand between him and emancipation, congregution” under the divection of Prof. | morning and about 1,000 worth of goods uro- | yact, that letters is more poorly paid | scholar, and able to grasp ideas rather | nervous, but,the major of the rogiment was sus- st missing, Entrance was gained by bursting | than the other learned professions; but | more readily than his mates, says ST arrang thing neatly in the | picious. The discharge was withheld ¢ ! ; open the back door. The wissing goods con- | yvet his statement is too sweeping. writer in the Rew England Magayine, | room and then sat down and calmly | fov a while. and, meeting the youth, sormon | The union sexvices at Boyd's opera house | gist of spring_overcouts, pants, suspenders | * bttty e was fond of b sports, and w ited for him to weaken, The gas was | Who was tow wid limh as usual, duisdiuchstomndyteacrowdedl ond jowelry, Thotracks of o buggy we The Life-Saving Services. always a favorite with his young com- wping rapidly, and the room wns fast | the major ound near' the store and with this as u clue 2 i & Wi 'y seventae illed ‘with i o o sumed seve ALL SAINTS et parties havo startod In pursuit, A buggy | From 1871 dates tho beginning of the [ rades. He wus nearly soventoen puingilledhte i ’,‘,‘(',‘.lj, LI Jimbor up. thit log within twenty-four nducted Burgla rar Crry, Neb,. April 6 d ev UNIOY SELVICES AT BOYD'S. Last evening Re that was listened t Targe congregation. that hundieds of people weve turned aw: ng his led out to him with ty: “Blank, if you don’t Her deliver nd appreciated by a very | lst night a ears If there was something of troly sacred per o , ’ 9 ith two men and a lot of goods was =e. saving service of the United | 01d wheu he entered Bowdoin college; v IR PR 3 3 e fectness in the homage which nature paid to tho THE PROHIBITION BLIGHT. i R ;’,’m“:,"‘.',;,,i“‘,;‘,m,l'i,‘ % writer in the New England | and he graduated in 1860, just before he | Allof a sudden he jumped up i h [ "“'j"‘ ! ML rder ‘lf‘:( 'I'y',‘l,;f”k,l,"l“. thrice saered anniversary of yesterday, the = e 5 probable they have been overhauled by The . service now, | had attained his majority. = Towards his ‘I did mnot come here to be | ;:",\””!"I“.M(lm"i\”j:w:;ml‘”’. Atonn "If. Effects of a Two Years' Trial of That murdered,” and, making a rosh, | fairest tributes ¢ valty had heen brought to do honor to that anniver- piscopal ch the hydrang il lll\\\llll\.’ from its sheath of green, and blood red carna- tions, the latter woven in @ memorial cross | lager, M affixed upon the face of the altar, all whis- | e of the elud cvent to which theie beanty | ent so brilliant @ charn, Extending high | above und from either sido of the e entrance to the chancel wasa gabled | ports as ave prepared for the prohibition op- | Custer, and additiov outline thickly wound wth smilax iuter- | yaus by some ministerial brother, who spends | facilitics freo of charge to. the Sy il:-”:‘h T il Howcre. s }rl"‘“ the greater portion of his time in the secli. | Pany. At an enthusiastic meeting held in | tinued to gro D e Dt it | sion of his home, and as & consequence knows | Custer City court house it was rosolved to | into this ¢ R T R e very little of whatt oceurs in the business por- | Acquiesce in the proposal of the rilroad com- | ing 2 it does along the consts w and following on beyond were lost in v pany. Steps will be taken to seeure right the Allunuoland bugl iofoceane und t hatever 210U8 nooks nunid tho sanoty immediat City bonds will probably | $hoves of the great lakes and tho Gulf of | WEIEVCY 3 IDhie spcinl sorvices of thod The total number of stations | tWo years that he was o i ¢ ) o | and were told of in handsomely prepared pro- | V¢ X fune | chitiged considerably, devoting himsclf | opposition to hi grammes. Holy communion was obseryed at | resident of our city dur entirely to his studios, and almost in- | many - quan ) T I e v A e el re hes discussed: ho bebeld the sen- ial apti- | and drunkenness of the town; | nature yields father was able to college expenses his give him very little help, and he con- ' y | sequently had fo rely almost wholly on | taking sash and all with him, 1i | his own resources. His clussmates in | was about twenty foet from the ground, | is ncedless to s d college speal of him nis always an orig- | but when he landed he stavted off as if a | dischiry In fact, n chango came over inal fellow, with ideas of his own, and by | mad bull was after him and 1 ney | no means slow to impart them to others, | him or his bill for—I can’t help if you asions, he | don’t believe me. It's the teuih and if | you come up here tomorrow Tl show i himsolf and you can ask cter. WAL through the influence of Hon. 8. I. Kim® (L and Hon. S. 8. Cox, thoroughly or- rized, and the stations manned of- ficered by those best fitied for this pov- ilous work. Men, strong, able-bod . o and accustomed to the s oter in 1886 and 1887, but few | its agent, a few days since submitted to the ]min(l-ll. regardiess of ts demund for vight-of-way | views, Thus the little seed sown by | In college, on several o0 by the | showed the qualities of a leader in i s prominent in [ you the 1 -four hou 1leg was a 45 1ee b ood as its mate. It hn didn’t recei twen 1 expired his disens cy in kb April 6.—[Spe to Tue 'he Outlook at Custer City. tion is past and for ouo year | CUsTER City, S, D., April 6.—[Special to wave no authorzed dispensers of | Tie Ber.]—Custer's railroad prospects have ¥ towns and cities have tried it | become an actualit, The B. & M., through as did B reports have been made as tothe comparative | Deople of our city | orkings of the two systems, except such ve- | for its line from Dudley to this point through | these men of Cape Cod, foste: } 1 grounds for depot | Massachusetts Humane Society, and by | marked degree, He w ) e L | e et that Nibienal [ GoTammntiEhins o :h." mecting x")f his class ;n[m n.;:.,-‘l'-. \im if it isn't so. ‘ il it has reloné ntes of the literary societie uving | 3 S s ovelobel | o firat yonrs of hi college. course T | The Childhood o Shed oy | paid lessattention to the vegular studics | We sce how Jons | and the | than to general wing, devouring | taught by his father to lo on men | t me in his way. Intl Wt | a8 natur vory wicked, says the New |\ Nunswick e | England Magazine, The lad saw the | The | jumped through the window, The rose tinted the restiul palm, ve his » ater wi ter hmn that moment, = Ho vs and showed 2 ind abrave one, the youn servid ¢ himself 4 his envinl battleficid will testify. his three ye srood sold syecord gained on muny o Pelt. stitute fo the cheap derby hats that will 15 of St. Louis this of a new material of Many ¢ be worn on the st spring will be which the hatters have just got hold. ufs is enllod Tinters says the St. lobe-TX o It the short the cotton han Edwards wa s upon me: tion of the city % Perhaps it may be of g y were lengthy | ojuq 4 oy notes compiled neral intevest to |V an unprejudiced | be voted. Prominent railroad contracto e 'lm’( four | Jobn Pitzgerald and W, I, and R, J. 1Kl 1;(1‘;”:';'1“;‘!;'[; l;"'_llhfi" )::I“l;;::llll\];l«)x|i" s atorved at | Fears, und the people of Exeter would like to | DAttick have recently passed aver the lino | 30, Al B i and holy com- | 3 peop © 10 | \yith a view to putting in bids for constru seabourd and Gulf coust, seven on the | Invarial un other towns through the columns | tion or the line from Dudley to this ity The | Dacific slopes, forty-four on_ the borders | recitation, He showed no special of Tk BEE as to the comparative workings | bids will be opened at Lincoln, Neb., April 10, | of the Great Lakes, and one at the Falls | tude for iathematies or the e of attempted prohibition and successful high | When the eutive contract fo road from Dudloy to Custer w futher; he heard the | Louis n left on the seed aft been ginned by the Is his cotton to the me 1 ton raiser, hant and cott s in the surrounding 1 He s sht | the seed to a mill that makes cottonseed munion at 11 a. m., and choral evensong at 4+ | hear f pal services were those oc- STi06E . ly =i s fiery preach- P . The prine 2 at 11 o'clock, when the congregation was one of th éstever seou fin Omaba. | 0 At the first f these services the musie icense, The ti 1ines s ol Ve superiororder, “commonc- | The close of the year 1355 loft Bxetor ot of | y 1'.3,',‘.’.,(“' W I eets of his fath oil. The miller puts the seed throngh moral ef ! i and natuvally he came to | another gin, specially made to clonn ) on from the seed. 1nan oil capacity several bales of sl from the seod in this building thé | ¢t (ho Ohio rivor ab Louisville, Ky. but evineed astrong liking for literature, 1L be ayeurder. 1 se on the | philosophy and the languages and their de- Spenker Reed owes his suce th - Hiles' proce Uo7 ; f | it by the Harney Peirk Tin Mining ! lotha bt |“(‘.i\;m ],‘:..1 to any dwe with et processional, O, Zion, | debt and witl $00 in pocket, town warvants | and Milling company ard attrcting no little | the stern® not as shavp as the stem. gieninan ) L R AR S G with | SChrist | oviod as United States greenbacks, two | dttention from the whole country. The Some are fitted with uiv-chambors, while | ness for political mancuveing. e has | 1 B our Passovor is S us,” by Mor 1 cent decision of the ways and mear pmmit- 8 Are »d iyl ioht o w | few of the characteristies of a politician, | home, where total depravity waus u ington: Hiles' “Te Deum Laudimus, in 1, | €mpty dwelling houses, not a vacant business | {et GG 0 0 e i fo Diaee dutyon | others ave fitted with alv tight copper | gl G20 tapoken und has, therefove, | oxplain all” actual and imaginary sins, and “Jubitate Deo, in 1, by the same com- | house, sidewalks extended in every divection ) o dor e duty ou | tanks at each ond. . The boats used on At i y vilure “of a The life-boits in gene ow Jersey const ave flat-boitomed, and the world o very | short cof co and the naturdl | mill of sn very flend, Inthat pavsonage | cotton nre (U to | way. The fiber is broken and very sho and up to a fow months ago the mills 1d it to stufl hedding wi Its price ound Custc 55 whe might do worse | Which Tho pastor, Rey. Louis Zahner, spoke from | In April, 1856, the prohibition boar Tirst Corinthians, xv, 20, “Now is Christ 2 A L0 tha e bidon: bowd, g visen from the dead aid become the fist would othe island alse iron keel: and | aeteristic veply, “The 0 0 to foreign countrics, | tained by hent of | and 1 think they will heavy fied, pussed a stringent ordinance against the | ¥ Unusual activity is the latter by the inside arr being manifested in sales and transfers of tin hul and went to the boat, which consists of shambers fruits of them that slept. sale of liquor, installed a ms » His Assistants, proporties round about Custer. Several 1 n 7 S sleep, A law and order league was then or- 4 i i e laced along the sides and ends, re- | TV RY'S AVENUE CONGREGATIONAT \ 2 wrominent tin mining groups have been | pliaced along the side 1l end | 9 Ot filco was ¢ Atthe St Mary's avenue Congrogational | ganized, 825 paid into the gencral fund, sev- Bonded. Tor. $10,000, - and \.m;‘. as high as | lieving tubes and ballast, consisting of M. »\'_: 10uL’s ¢ {H B 01 | church groups o lilies here and there upon | cral small boys paid to 4l up on buck boer, | £25,000, a water-light case packed with cork EDaiLeRicRoroI Yoors Dol | the platform wade spocinl - note - of | which Was boiug dispensed. here, two prose. | - Mv. Moss, who represents a New Yorl mill | placed ut midships, and seuttle at cach inaugurated a custom o and mining company, will put in a forty r-Custe the sacred anniversary. ‘The { of the music were Dudloy’s *Te Deum flat, and Vincent's anthém, ©As it B Dawn.” The remainder of of special Kaster service: atures | cutions began aud finally dismissed and they "in K | too, went to sloep with the consciousness of [ gold mill at Four Mile, ¥ .00 hie end te tl | constant dr of Kern's rooms | under which those eavly lock,” said a | @ fact which has been too little ! ting of the cotton weland: a fact, also, which only | up in pr i ced to my guide that | thoso who huve had ex perienee in a sim- [ pound cheaper than cotton, The discov- i oy o ke to have a lowering etfect dvance e ilar situation can fully appreciate, y s likely hyunaninhoneal Yl upon the kin of derbies which hive sold Chicago Tribunc, 1 was passing through one afternoon about 2 0 i man who used to be in politics, “when I | into v Mr. Armour and several others at o | of New ki zan to | having done therr duty Moss_expended 8 programmoe | During the yeurs 185 and 1887 thirty-seven | veloping and a sisted_of re- | families left town, tw | by the manufocturers to make contracts | o all the linters they conld get off the ed, Now linters has gone away f all lifeboats, attached to the guny is a large roll of cork, to make the bo buoyait. In many cases to this roll of ! the same | cork ave fastened life-lines looped up in and another one was ar- | time. festoons, to which a person in the wat wtes mavshal for selling. e can_cling, Some' of the festoons ave nment license, taxes increased SPORTING NE GBS (T s > overboard of it and sales of three of our most made so long that one overboard cun 10 offering amounted to #455.03 and will | prominent business houses from whom these Omaha 19, St. Louis 13. casily step into'them, und unaided crawl special Telo | into the boat, x cold mines places wh liquor | proy the gold out sponses and . req . offering and offevtory, | could be obtained’ were running night and | just at the present tin is ki, and a discourse by Rev. K. b, Clark, D.I),, | day, five government liquor licenses were | ing worked on a paying busis” at president of the United Society of Clristiai | held by partics he count in 1 ud s only a fow conts i tuble, T vema pork would probubly sixteen hours, meanis . ioj of Mr. Avmour and othe BroRouie M ADIL 10| at that hour was o confore gram to Tue Bee. There was a slim crowd ™ Sl p— SYou are mistak tness the i A Scotc deavor, whose text was in L John iii, 3, | rested’by a United It Does Not Yot Appear What We Shall | without'a go Bon # per W 80 to Doane college und Franklin academy, | figures wer i Atthe beginn hat the pr at adin I Rl Samples of D, M opative Nervino [valr o onpork, | Sam f Dr. Mil 3 rvin Wl | atKubn & Co’s,"13th and Dougls, curcs | Sleaders™ for their other goods, selling he, nervousness, sleeplessness, neu- | hom at haif the cost of the felt hat a, fits, ete. | for $3, and in fact some merchants o rhios s obtained, deereased 35 per co ¢ of 1388 there w three dwellings ‘for rent,” three business | u¢ Sportman's Park toduy houses vicant, sidewalks ahd stroots in poor | U Sportman's Datk today to THE PEOPLE'S CHUR The decorations wor n, said the guid X ; Eostofice Story “Phose gentlemen are the heads of de- | ikt 10 | Kame between the Omahas and St. Louis | =~ Flere is the higgpry of a most intere partments in Mr. Armour'a business, 1t per cent, and & small balance was tur | Browns, but 600 persons being nt. | ing carcer in the Edinburgh postoffice. | {5515 custom every day to bring them With a K to the licenso board, which amount however | Hunt oficiated as umpire while ain | In 1867 a youn, | was overshadowed by outstanding warrants, | Ditehed ror St. Louis and Fanniug for the | probationary e During this period theve were daily importa: | Visitors, The’ Browns anado 7 ruus in | dgpartinent, says the London ons of liquor and more ¢ T s | the fiest i g o the whas rolled up | 1871 he stoo. Ahi o 3 tions of liquor and wore drunkenniss, This | the fist fnning while the Onhas wwiled W | 1871 he stoodtianty-third on the list of | B consumption there 1s. no reforence to | Ben sitors scoring 6 poiuts and the homw beautiful, consisting of flowers and singing birds. Mr, Hurvey nd his assistant deserve the greatest praise thow skill and tasto in aresugment The principal Hovists of the city made gifts of flowers. 'The handsome Easter lilies and the bell deserve esp The singing was rend under the direction of Mr, Franklin 8. Smith The singing was really fine, The two Buster anthems were especially ap The song applauded Prof, J. A heol and con grogution i a respousive Easter service und it - New York World: O again has the Sep vian cabinet been reovganized. A Serv ministry seldom lusts s long as one of 5.1 tor Blaiv's specch condition, town warrants discounting at ggntleman entered as w |, ks in the ve for dinner, It isn full course din- | The coroncr London o fow weeks azo held an inquiry at the Londor the déath of William rcountant’s | ey, too, and s an expensive one and Pruth. By [ uid for by Mr. Armour. In the time of | hospital respecting | unin Rowland, aged thirty sneral elevks fn that office, with w sal- | husiness, Stories ave told and political | carmun, late in the employ of A y of £110, visinif to £220. Above this | questions ave often discussed. Just at | Mucnumava, and lutely vesiding wsslon is going on in there | Brady stroet, Whitechapel, says the Pu her Carter Hareison ought to | Mall Gazette, On the 20th of July lust 2 van, nd d on iul mention red by the chorus ‘t that | 10. The second inni can bo vory casily expluined by the fu | l\qmu beilg somewhat more dificult to ob- | the 3 tain when a man did strike a keg or a bottle | team 1. Stravs, Kearns and he would endeavor to ot let any be wasted. | celled for the Omalas and Canay The writer, who by the way 1s strictly tom: | tained his repatation as o base vanner. The | Whose saluvics pode to £500. Tn 1872 perate was shown over the town onc night in | feature of the Browns' play was Adaws' | hero of this vi 1555 by ouo who “knew the ropes,” aud ve- | splendid catehing. The scor wembers vory distinetly his experi Onnhi Thho first place visited was i cortain dwell. | 5t ing house, and upon certain raps upon the - 4 door we were admitted, conducte 1[4]"1 back Happy Choynski. room whoré liquor was being dispensed toa | The San Farncisco Call select body of wen and boys, somo of whom | ski 13 & happy mun._Only wero not supposed to be drinking men, pocketed several hundred dollars in defeatig The next placo visited was u collur whero a | X ¥orgh Busgreg dollars du galeating poker tablo was in full operation and a keg 52 Datr on e 1h the torian il : is about to be matehed to fight Ju | F'rom there to a large vacant building Omaha. The cont 5 ¢ uni i truding | somo distanco. from. the busincas aeter | Occldental elub, of which the Hon, Ross [ of £500, "By universul consent, this | hus heen aguin let by Lady Herbertof | of the blado of a knife protruding | hion, Btk St hopoatiuss | Centel | icison 18 prosident, | The timo will be about | yoush ws an individual of anythibg but | Tea to Cornelius Vanderbilt for the en- | through the left side of the tempor: ‘ | | | Andrews ex- i main | elass was a staff'af seven fivst-class elerks | {his time . disc \ tuted by young Muster Rteed was loudly the | 4g to wh 1 3 wdpus nareative was sud- | o pe-clocted mayor, Sometimes they | deceased was dviving o pair-hos by innings: denly elevated” oygr the twenty-two gen- | giscus# religio 06002100010 epal” clevks wid the seven first- s Fa e 718100171 0-18 ind o literary topi s matters and sometimes | when one of the horses shivd | censed was pitchod oft his nss clorks sbove him, into | S\Whothar these dinners ave kept up | his head. Deccased did notehive u de fitting romarks to the little ones. The pastor, Rev, Charles W, Savidge, told the “story of 'the resurrection Tho sign singing by the deaf g audience spell bound Pho opers house was full of attentive hear ers and devout worshipers. The offering was devoted to the Subbath sehiool Iu the eveniug Father Clivk spoko to an tmyrense audience on the work of the Chuis- vor society | This Subbath was a grand one iu the his the ‘tupper section” of the same | pow [ do not know.” knife in his hand. He was o admit- | lary of £310, rising to - ted to London hospital as a ease of kid rderbilts’ London House. | ney dise md was afterward found to | rlooks the | be'suffering from phthi Devonshive house, and i3 | tem examination sho held the 1. There was no other individual in Vi this upper section, and after a decent in- The red house which « val this section was abolished, and fow days ago he | | 06 Choyn- | Office, with a Lol rdens ¢ Billy Wilson in a couple of rounds, now he the young gentleman who composed it | known as known as Herbert house, Bel- | dition of the brain was nori Davis of with a s grave square, though not in the squar opening the head there was found pur t will take place at the | became a principal cley s un tory of tho People's church. | I the dark, a match was seruck, rovesling | he middle of May, and the men will fight ot | oxceptional capacity, but he wag a TIE PINST CONGREGATIONAL. thireo mon strotehod o the faos And oo abls, | between 170 and 175 pounds. Tho pugilists | clety” man, with o hame chronicled in | The Vand Tt sooms as though tbo lilics bloom with | as doad drunk 0s aen over were bofors, | Bave not vet agreed on tho amount of the | Buike, and doubtle whisky bottles and a 5'1”'.\"',}"1'..‘“ all probability the club will wus perceived of paying a person who | Jut keg expluined the wierd | them §1,70 | could trace his podigree for several gen- | London season at its height t A Pugilistic Exhibition. evations a paltry £110 por anu L iven | (A houso dy Loy was the praperty o | The MeAulifte-Madden combination, which | assured. however, that the very word | most fmposing struct W of | prominent prohibitionist) and on returuing to | includes Billy Madden, the well known | *‘jobbery” is unknown in the Ediiburgh | possess as much wortal 1ife, - wndovry | fown yussed o largo corn crib, where sevorul | traluce aud backer; Jack MeAulifle th postoftice, | be expected. Dbt which came'to his & Wout two | dort, Aug. 17, 1380 i Y ' L ’ suing scason, suys the London Letter. | bone ubout an inch. The brain s vbilts” will arriue in London | injured, the blade having passed between the incongruity | later this year, but they will also stay | the more of the | have been there some con m | vious years, Herbert house looks & | and there were no marks on the sku Absolutely Pure. s not | The coroner said that was o m \ A ore £ turtar buking powder. Highos t markable ca wnd A n r to f 1l rength. U, B, Government Roe convolutions of the brain, It must derful luxuriance and rure perfection for | whi erablo tim aster day, us though the touch | nearly hund tiyo thousand years ugo, d We left this place thoroughly disgusted, and will really se¢ of the as H d one shining stem and preac: W ewnon o its | petals, had to thom something of t His own i ) ) | y tin plate places at vest all doubt as to our now A aata Y . st WEE OW | plenty of enemies, even in hisown party, | Where the comparative | X u ' punts Anthom— Acts xvii, 31 Palms | to the outskivis of the corporation stroets in | plactng the tin industry_on u successful foot- :_"‘. ‘—“_“”"“""‘ and BELTS gaaig D Tt ot s M tiecons. they uva | gloomy theology was attvibuted to the | was about half that of averugo -8 oy Bt sy othees (| oo repair, one siloon paying $1,20 lieense, | g and furiishing the whole United States | fuger and move complivated in thele | a6 080 dging fower. When nutive wickednoss of the heart, what | cotton, The = megrocs in - th tho biendinge of many oxecllont voicos Miss | VO 1ittly rowdyism on Sunduy and no mur- | With its thh without gotngabroad fora pound, | [ O+ SEETEIEERET LG They aro. by | lntoly 1f ho thought his party would at | could such wlad thigk excopt that men | sauth . ware = tag OIYer BSES Pennell's incompirable contralto proved u | shal, the emstables heing cousidored capable | yishod to no less than thirty thousand men, | their peculinr construction, self-bailivg | Some future day run him for_ the prosi- | ; I"\\ A [’ AL o e TR sunLihe el he mRLoMAlded o Dablo; . 10 less X uliar ! h uiling | somefRegday run blay o, thaipled S is gloom o | would get w good, big order fi i st 1 frunning dn the ssciibocetulonal dvunie | and copin this countey at leust 000000 | and sell-riglting, —tho focutor power ot | deneys he 1 suld to hitve made the . i hadowe l.lun. yan Edwards | concerns thit made pillows and matt vhood wus intensificd by the pre- | resses. Suddealy somehody found out vailing mood ®f feveri | that it could he nade to imitate folt for tion, ~ fostered by the monotony | cheap nats, The cxperiment then of and hardships of thit ploneer lifo and | making hats of linters was tried on by the constant fear of the Indians, | large scalo this winter by o New York } whose ravages Windsor Favrmes folt for [ factory, and the hats were r..m |I‘. x.‘mln \lmit o frop curvent of air undey | dining the heads of his departments in | many yours. o Rovedsmornighov solLion | & g _‘)“”\.'l'l“"l" ik TORY, ORORINE s " L e of ) > rooms, suys the | the growth of superstitions est showed thy 5 1 water-tight deck. Along the outside | 0ne of K private rooms, suys th LI e e