Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 8, 1890, Page 16

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SREAEN KT ATEY A R T R p— - TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JUNE 8. 1806.-SIXTEEN PAGES. — e HONESTY. : - /\(‘ /\I\TS’I‘ \IAY We Are Going to Try to Do More Business this Month Than We Did Last. If we succeed, it will be phenomenal. If [Ji Ta 6 I ‘ we do as Well, it will be remarkable enough, for we must say that our May business was something wonderful. Success leads t() success, and encouraged as we are in our special sales, we wvork Harder to Make T hem Better LOOK AT OUR PROGRAMMEK THIS WERIK* Bed Room Suits, oak, cherry and walnut, $9.50, 3 Parlor Suits, plush brocatelle and tapestry coverings, $20, Folding Beds, 50 designs, all wood, $10, 5 $28, $35, $50 e : g Tl s ke Brussels Carpets, 100 patterns to select from, 50c, 65c, Wardrobes, all wood, $8.50, $10.50, $12.50, $15 up. 85¢, 95¢ up. Extension and Kitchen Tables, $1.25, 1.75, $3.75 § Ing rain Cnrpcrq 17¢, 25¢, 40c, 60c up. : Lace Cmmms and \deow Shades, 26¢, 55¢, $1, $2 up Cane and wood scat Chairs 20c, 40c, 65¢, $1 up Bdb Carriages, $2, $3.50, $5.75, ‘5) 50 up. Sideboards, $12.50, $19, $25 up. asohnc and -Cook Stoves, $3, $5.25, $7./5, $11 up. M AND OUR ENTIRE STOCK AT EQUALLY LOW PRICES. W LR LKA, Lol PAYMENTS. B NINE GRAND PRIZES GIVEN AW $30 wor goods, $1.50 per week or $6 pe ; : 7 M : ; 7 $30 }\( rth of ko Is, $1 )“l)u week or 6,_1,“ month Owing to the immense and un]n'occdcnml success of our prize d Third Grand Prize—One handsome oak sideboard. . . ... .value $ $60 worth of goods, $2 per wecek or $8 per month, - tribution which takes place July 5,at 7 p. m., we have decided to in- | Fourth Grand Prize-1 cclebrated family universal cook stove value $90 worth of goods, $2.50 per week or $10 per month. crease the number of prizes from uuht to nine. Every purchaser is &'“'[lll '(’,‘j,““}l ll)'_“ ‘(’)“C, "‘“]‘.1"‘”‘1‘1”""]‘ :L"'.'|']l"" "“‘1”“ e e catitled to a ticket for each $10 worth of goods purchased. ixth Grand Lrize—One solid oak extension table BElLe $125 worth of goods, $3 per week or $12 per month. Seventh Grand Prize—One gorgeous plush oak rocker. . .value $250 worth of goods, $5 per weck or $20 per month. S — o ro S s First Grand Prize—One beantiful plush patlor set alue $100 | Eighth Grand Prize—One fine decorated stand lamp. ... .value Second Grand prize—One elegant oak chamber suit. . . . . .value 100 | Ninth Grand Prize—One handsome hanging hat rack . .. .valuc PEOPLES MAMMOTH INSTALLMENT HOUSE; OMAHA'S LEADING TIME PAYMENT HOUSEH, ; 3, 015, 617, 619 North Sixteenth Street, Between California and Webster Streets, Omahax, i oy & r for s »s to the postofiice depart- [ It has a picture s a barn, ¢ e e - s . 4 i r n T ol 9 4 B AN k 10 \ either for supplics 1 pic as a barn, and | into swing he goes across to the Betha 0in the evening, doing the bes L R TN N coming on? Author—Good. Fve got “ A\\M“\ RS B]G BRMN. ment or any other department of the govern- | this is filled with some of the precious art | church where he has a biblo class of 1,000 | part of his work after the rost of the clerk Fl/< Ol‘ THE ”A“\KI:RS- the material on hand for 158 ment and I am told that this order has re- | works owned by the postmaste cral. He | men and women, He talks to these in the | have gone. Hehas a number of hobbies in novel. “Youare a lucky man,” *That’s — duced the profits of the firm during the | haslittle pieces of canvas here which have | most practical way and leads the singing, | his postofice work and he is always after notall; I've got the material for ¢ The Wonderful Things It Has Accom- | Past vear fully = $100,000. The only | cost$200an inch, and I am told by an art | After the service is over the teachers all stay | new ide A man who tried to get work of | A Barely Possible Explanation fora Young | did comedy, I i You arve fortus : : vay in which the government can now buy | friend of his that thero aro at loast $200,000 | and when they are through hestops and | him thoother day was asked by him whother Lady's Breosy Bathing Suit, nate.” *Yes, all Lneed now Is the mae plished in a Few Years. anything @ namaker's store is by its | worth of pictures in this room. Still these | shakes hands ks to the scholars. He | he had ' Ledy/gBisesy B % terial for a new pair of pants. gents purchasing over the counter like tho | paintings comprise only part of his collec- | hus his scholars all organized into wovking Any New Ideas 1 B y shopper. To give a further idea of and heis, you know, the possessor of | bands of charity and mission work, and im- | and what he could do for him, and when the | SHE JUST FITTED FOR A CHAPERONE, | The Remedy Worse Than the Discase. A VERY LITTLE WORLD IN ITSELF. Slishment, 1t bas tho largost retail | Munkacsy's “After the Wedding," which | mouse quantitics of coal und provisions are | man really showed that he had some original- Rl ¢ e "“”””.{ T book business in the United States. 1ts cellar | hangs on the loft wall ¢f the gallery. Thero S A e < 3 —Oi hev a chinder in me oye, from the k S 4 galler; icre Stril othe P ity he was at once given ajob. Postmaster i contains the biggest electric light plant of the | are mere than fifty pletures un thy swalls of P 1'1‘4"“;\!("”'“ OO Gonoral Wanamalser was suwepeisod o find | She is Quite Deaf and Almost Blind— | gas-house! XA 4 The Immense Establishment in Phila- | wiole world and under its one roof more than | this ball room, and though they are al! ve and understands how to muke when he first came into office that a number Mr. Mullin Preferred the Cin- ,],‘\‘E‘:' \)lvrllllmi ,s”“ Hfl..- This 17 delphin—His Pride in His Sun- nlmu thousaud ulw; il durin the or- | valuable 1o not think that some cf t HAILolleaa it s aboy of the idcas that ho. supposed. were his had A Ss epre BHRIEEL (o el yur ) Rosainld day School—Extentive Plans diug Ao and thismjimbor reagad aro as beautiful as thoso which | tiuns in their work and he has has en formulated and discussed by other post- A Dog's Pants. -out wid U‘ T T N i e T 5,000 at Christu hung it in the days of the Whitney owner- | . Hepesiem e nsterl sonrals LT ts Ervnaliso hwithEtho 3 5,00t Chi un 08 | ] 5 0 shut, an’ shneeze like th’ divil! advertising and b @ S | ship. etary Whitne i a remarkable individual | postal t aph, which he thought was a Smith, G C Monthly: Biggs— Mullin—O0i l nl: Il kape th’ chi asalary of $12,000 ¢ 3 ys taste in art, and in_his collection are many i wears > o 2 lo0 . i k. ‘The mothers of the chil- | new thing, and the postal savings bank, | T wonder why s Phonn wears a | Rosiel tha Bhiladaiphin ps opieiis b ':‘j‘f,"l”'_" i “'l Hag Which VAl | Gron counsel with bim und he gives as much | to the cause of which he is ar-| cheek bathir STt month for udve and ono of his | derbilt considered finer th painting bo [ o000 MRS as by his money. After | dently devoted. Tho dea n Wiy | Rigga-—Probubly hecause sho wants it Second Natur e o b inha ahat] los in advertisemonts is that they shall | owned, and some of his piotures ofthe French | 4y i€t AAC TS 88 7 WS TOATs Site8 | ool tatagraph schemo of having the comt | 1o “Bly the Bear AT e santG T can politics is John Wai tell the truth. Among his principles of suc PR o wonderfully beautiful. 'The post- spends the remainder of his Sunday with his | Petitive telegraph lines do the business, and Crm e close,” remarked the guest to tho | AH(6 postunaater goneral ot the United States. s are application, integrity and ad r-general is u good judge of fine paint- ¢ 0 I family if they ave in Philadelphia, He comes | having the postofiies merely deliver the mes- _The Best He Could Do. waiter, “ean’t I have a little frosh air? A man whose whole life has been that of | ingand he ranks these high in the ady . Ho has back to Washington early on Monday, and is s is his own, and his scheme for appoint- |~ Clothier and Furnisher: Wife—I am The well drilled automatun raised his 3 rives o o 018 arested largely % S ing -a gene! anagor jce de- | 80 anxious for a new dres: voice to a high pitch, business, who has had nothing to do with | Eives toyoung men. He is interested largely Made a Study of Art, OrtAn atAhAlABARTent balore Higon: ing ageneral manager of the postofiice de ious for a n SabRl it i X politics nor politicians, ho is_mado tho head | in the wholesale branch of his establishment, | gnq can tell a good puinting without asking | Postmaster-General Wanumakor spe partment, who shall have s foa tori| ot Busband sCanluyon waih dosr giuntll s pnanaatishenyallbRalierad minso, of what has always been the biggest political | Which goes under the name of Hood, Bou- | 15 aayico of . picture buyer. He knows y hours at his desk us auy postmnaster- | ten years at 10,000 a yea ) Heo SIS S DDy A machine of the government. Thore are more | bright & Co., and ho has some stock, Tunder- | 104 of the great artists of Paris personally, | gencral wo have hud for He vises at | bas several other hobbies in addition to these, A Young Financi than 150,000 employes who are more or less | Stand, in the tirm of Wana & mwwowih | and he is a haunter of the studios when he i | abont hulf-past six o'clock, shaves himselt | A0 he works at theso steadily, hammering | mime; &, mamma, how mueh am T[S0t i N dircetly under tho control of the postmaster | though o has nob been associated with this | {i'y = and takes a good, plain breakfast, Ho rides | 8Way and hoping to succeed. He a | worth? s Slothleninng '“'“'*I PRI for- generul and his big red fingers rest upon tho | firm forsix years and he werely holds thelr | "y g postmaster-general and his wife have | down to the d¢ partment in the department | Dard worker and knows bette a You are worth a million to me, my '\[‘,"11\1(..‘,)“‘,::“;,‘1’:#; x,,\”.,'.]v“;.:“u‘..“ o ‘.‘:I keyboard to which is attached the wires | stock as co r, however, is bost known | Citertined more” lavishly than any other | coupe and heis ready for work at half-past | #1¥ other man in the administration how to | son, stagnation 10 business their salaries will rouching out to overy city and villago in the | John Wanauler, however, is best known | ity conncated with the administration, | cight, thirty minute foro. his fores | make other men work, Ho is well liked at mamma, cowldn’t you advanco me | RO 081 Dusnoss thelr aluwios wil country. It was indeed o curious appoint- | from this big rotail store. Ho owns the most | i porhaps the exception of the Mortons. | of clerks have begun to arvive, Ho the department, and soclally s a jolly good | twenlty-five cents? Ist. ment ill Benjamin Harvison has in John | Of it, though Robert O. Ogden b pt open house, have$en v | aprivate secretary, Mr. Marshall Cusk fellow. John Wanamake 1 NTaelcas A d e Mr. Mumm—7Yes, sir, Wunamaker his closest ally and his strong- | terestand ho has the entire 4 i receptions, and at tho close of | whom he pays himsclf to uttend to his per- | deal of money in ch o g SN e Jillings Great Merchant—And by the way, if o the store now that Wanamake . a3 i ch Washi ho Clothier and Furnishc Billings— i Y est friend. He has in him perhaps the hard- e iy A pa A Afstisad it few of their parties this picture lery | sonal matters, and this mau is an old news- | 81 g }Y“‘ il . ho Thero is only one way to keep your | the architect calls with thoso plans for est worker of his cabinet and one of the | Mminister. o o P e & PEVAO 1 hall room has been thrown open for dancing. | paper man who takes his dircetions from the | ©10ugh applitations every day trom all prts [ JAeke 18 Only ¢ gging, aid that is not to | my Newport villa, ask him out to dine. X strongest forces of bis aduinistration. Wuu- | Wik ranting from tho Bhiladelphia houso 0 | e postmaster-general fs noted as o Sunday- | postmaster general and dictates them to sten ‘l‘"‘“"“““v“"".\"\’l"}-‘_"‘l"'v‘_“{i“*“]"il"_“”“’”(- walk so much will return at 1 0'clock. amaker is stofic pe 3 only spent an ho iis morning in looking a Kingley—Great Scott! Don’t you A - Aldana threo or four messages pass over some of the letters which pour into his pri [ o e IENE e SEREL, COR Badly Out of Order. i this a day and these are more of vate secretary. They are from churel i Mrs, DuPelle—Did your husband gof social os than business it Sunday schools and ind lvals, and they ask rored, his type writer fixed yet, Mrs, DeGay? Mrs. Wanamal the girls are going to for everything from 3 irocer: He weing tothe | Mrs. DeGay—Why? 1 didn't know Philadelphia the postmaster-gencral will send A Set of False T¢ opera)—And what did you think of Sul- | there was anything the matter of it, a line announcing the fuct, or if Le wants to a donation of thousands. Many of the let- | livan’s sco Mrs. Du Telle—You didn't? Why, T some special arrangement ters havo the words *“Phe Lord loveth the She (disparagingly)—You forget, Mr. wrd more’n o month ago that My, Da cheerful giver” at the top, and not a few of | Mossbach, that Mr. Sullivan is o boxer— | Gay had mashed his typo writer, [Copyright, 8%, by Fi June 5.—[Spes to Tue The March of Trade, school man, ieve, agenuine | ographers. This man looks over the mail, dis Christian, and his cloak of religion has not s of a large part of it, referring matters been donned with his ofcial appointment nor | relating to the store to Mr, Ogden, those to his business success. Ho is not so straight- | the Sunday school to the manager at Phila laced, however, as were our Puritan father Iphia, and handing over to the postmaster and he does not consider dancing sinful. He | general suchas he cannot auswer bimself throw in his way and hesays if he could run will not use wines, however. at his state din he postmaster general gets about a cartload the postoftice departuient on his own plan he ners, and ho confines his own drinks to of marked newspapers eve ay. Mr, Cush- could malke 10,000,000 & yeur for the govern- For His Sunday School ollinaris, hawthorn water and the suce ing looks over these and clips out such matter & basaball pl rdedly)—Oh—well it went. his private wire is called into requisition, As 1 He believes i he ol I Mr. Wi ! them come from across the water. Hereis | B0t a baseball pl s 1 8 4 0 1 ; Y 4 s called into requis| As | soda. He believes in the obscrva as he thinks will interest Mr. Wanamaker AL BUMQICEON . HpEsas ) el will be fixed ‘when he comes home thig T don't doubt but that ho is correct. Tor | to ordinary business matters, he is seldom | of the Sabbath, and b and throws away such as he is sure will not, [ one dated February s : A More Important Case. evening the past forty years everything he bas | consulted and it is ouly as to questionsof | mot allow & letier or a gram | The postmaster general spends his fivst half Mr, Wanamaker: Isaw yournamo fn the | pycle: Huckmun—Is tho doctor at — touched has turned into gold and now at fifty business poll large purchases or | to be delivered at his house on Sunda He | hour at the department in dictating letters [ PapPer ”’“‘ '““‘n'l “‘»"’~_*|‘“} J :“*“ “‘“1';”""1' home? It Should Muu risdiction. two he is said to be worth $15,000,000 and ho r lot that his partners | will not talk business on Sunday and there | and attendi natters, Ho writes || cooierason Yol kowed What fo-do with, Bridget—Yes, siv; he's out in the back | Smith, Gray & Co.’s Monthly: i ) write usking you for somo of it. 1 will not ] 3 : has an income of about $2,000 a day. Stillit | have to telograph him. His two sons are | are no Sunday newspapers taken in bis house, | somo letters If and is well advanced | muke a > s, but I am a poor far- [ yard killing a chicken, i Guzzam (rending the P is only four decades since he was car members of the firm, and though I have not | He runs his Christianity, too, with 1 Ail by the time that half-past 9 has | wer's daughter, swer, Hackman—Call ‘im in, I've got bigger f an account of u man ary the clay which made the brick in his or's | met them, I am told that they are men of On Business Princ arvived. Ho hashad perbaps a council with A boy from a ng "‘-11 s hool _in ‘\M"-r”h; game, ding d Vas 1 dnleyan d abo! hat time he engage: C an onlinary businoss ability. o R t 8 SFE wants “money to finish his education, anc e Gazzam—Was he tried In the marrye brickyard, and about that time he engi m than ordinary busin abilty, Both | 10 g 1 ancs ohot ministers would get along | bis bureau chiofs and at this timo is ready to | HUS HORAN (0 HILER WIS cducatio reop Cool and Collected, T i e marry: clevkina bookstore fora less sum perweck than | are still under thirty and both are graduates [ o C S had more business tact. Few | Feceivethe stroam of scnators andrepresenta- | jous streams of blessings on Wane Smith, Gray & Co.’s Monthly: Goslin ! the scrub women of the postoftice department | of Priuceton colloge. Tom Wanamaker s tn | 0l ™ Dy (00 RS SRS BOk MW | vag” o8 omoo-saekers and others who then | maker ho sends it to him | —Jaysmith owes me $100 in cool cash A Blasted It get for a day. Hols called by his enemiesa | tho houso at Philadelphia and Rodmanspends | (AR, (86, T HOR 8 GAS (TEISUIAN WOk | yoiy 0 oomo™ Jorom 0 until 12 he is accessi A New Jersey woman siys she is very fond | borrowed money, doncherknow. Clothior and X counter-jumper and sneeving romarks aro | most of his time in Paris as the foreign pur- | et 46 18 AOWE RiRdagsaehoal-ay [ Ay o DR isic and tells Wanamiker that the B A e G R 2T E St hier an \ 5 > RugipeR . 4 hiladelphia which he started in the “Five N says that he shall not let the left hand know began the young man, *it hecome made about bis storo in Philudelphia. All | chasing agent of the establishment, Both of [ 1y GCTREE WHEL e St i and gives him a ready answer. This answer | Jre i e shall not let th o has boon | lected. sary for ma to spenk o you upoh a ¢ the world knows that ho has a storo the the young men aro warried and both have | LGt 0 (EET fved by the averago | 18 1ot always a politic one, for Mr. Wana- d o 865 organ for £20 cas anted Suddc 18h of Sympathy. ject which deeply concerns us both and the fact becamo pretty well advertised | babies in short clothes, Tom Wanamaker | ooC v O 0 (M CGRER O LI BVORMER | o ior i more of @ sbusiness man than a pol v six yeurs, and she w i ! v 11ho b Will first asle you to recall to mind th before he became postmaster general. Few | married a Miss Welch of oue of the old fam- | & s e g tician, He has, hisdfviends say, no other am- | buy it iis lotter is , D Chicago s BRI RG an o T hore. We ted, if people, however, appreciate the immensity of | ilies of Philadelphia, and his brother Rod. | W4 held In o tent and he was a successtul | R e \ (5 written, and it ends by s y s | petted young heires it true that An- A oAb UG Ry PAOPLG, b )8 e LU e POMANE Sunday school teacher when he was thivty | bition than to make a good posimtaster gen- f oo iy nticipation of the gift nie Simpson’s fover left her quite d you will r upon tho steps. As Bis business and tho wonderful system on | man has a French ludy for o wife. The post. | SHEUAY B0 EREIGE WK To wus thirty 1 which it is van. It is the biggest cstablish- | master-general has an eye for the beautiful | i il ment of its kindintho world, It farout- { in woman, and he is v fond of -his ranks the great Bon Marche of Paris, and it | daughtors-in-law, He dotes more over his eral and he does niot want to be seuutor from | * A Virginiu man has wade & cane fr FH R G g A Tea L) I procecded y ucross the lawn the imagined that he would be a vich man, and | Peunsylvania, noris at Monticello and will be thankful for any “Thut 15 what your Cousin Simpson | full moon came from hehind a cloud and 1, T am told, five times tho sizo of Jordan & | grandehildwen than President Havrison dc Marsh's great Boston establishment. It | over Baby McKee, aud ho is essential tho wildest dreaifier would not have pointed The Presidential Bee thing Mr. Wanamaker sends him, and a Rus- | wpites. dear,” enveloped me in a flood of mellow glory. clears, T am told, $1,000,000 a year and it does | family man siun woman has heard of My, Wanamaker's “ " 1 Suddenly, Miss Clara, it ymed to e him oub as a cabinct minis am told that | buzzing in the thick brown hair v ses | benevolence t Let her come and live with us, mam- | (4 gt Tam 1 zing in the thick h v benevolence and writes for without w note of warning, I wus overs ® business of §5,000,000 anuually. Itsroof | Probably no public man in Washington has covers acres and on au ordinary week there | a more pleasant home life than John Wana Vannamaker risked his life in s ) o has ‘the'| hen o Dosbmast caded the daughter, with eye Wanuamaker risked his lifo in stavting his | from bis broad forchead. He has the | hangs in the postmuste 1 L ey ek are 25,000 buying at it at one time. You can | maker. He is thoroughly n and he believes in running his dep: busiuess principles. He is chafed ov by the clogs which the necess: tions with senators and al c 7 ma was about to obsorve, Miss Clara,” Sunday school and that the toughs of the | faculty of decid 3t ight off and | W five f v sympathy “One moment, Mr, Smithers,” inter and this obain was rupted the beautiful girl as she stuck an he began with the ra; ‘:mlAmL 1 and tried | make a move ofticient ter geueral it e AT Evidently Not, extra hairpin and turned down the l‘um’lw. ..]u-.xl.‘.-m-‘..x\ e 1s Iu(lll“.:u;va Bup- he undc tood tho palitical partles and fa5 |y ong o to.jue posturmster genoral Sinith, Gray & Cos Monthly: “When | threo-quaris M,v“‘m‘w b, Thon driws " 0 4 day school was perhaps this gelting that | tions of the various states bette FosTr R Bkl o LBLIR et . the jury brought in a verdict of ‘guilty.’ | ing her chuir still closer, she indicated Ood anythingln it from o fish hook to a steam- In Love with His Wife made him work the harder for Wannamaker | divide up the ofices in order to havmonizo | In the next roor ’ hair u_ feoh | the prisoner turned pale and trewmbled | bY & wave of her hand that he could pro- the outcome of the bralus of this o 'l’ o | daughter who are good old-fashioned | only made him the more anxious to succeed. | to suit many of them, thoush b does not b € o sond 4 | “Then he didn't have the cc & mistake, “"“:“;'-‘“ aupRose. ¢ l‘ 14068 | girls, and with whom he toves to romp [ A man who visited his Sunday school tho | lieve in the clyil service as at present consti- | Rgrgon \ i his convietion. continued the youn “that I was wny business for tho governmont. Thero ure | gever’ his day's work is over. Every | other day was telling omething as to its | tuted. He thinks that every cabine s { master v overwholmed by tho onslaughts of your Two Other Wanamaker Firms one knows where ho lives. It is in the his- | proportions. Saidhe: *Wanamaxer has two | tershould have the rizht o look & man in | one, nor could it bo sol Xas th ) Accounted ¥ ineri dolt oma upshieg NASkN in Philadelphia and itis theso which have | torio Frelinghuysen mansion, which Mrs. | granito tabernacles, oue of which s the | the eye before he appoints him and that | Bfterwanls suggest i g Smith, Gri Co.'s Montbly: Tramp | 9 WY ShOry 0 Bac & BISH10 S0 U NN caused the accusation that the postmaster | Whitney mado such a soclal center during tho | Bethany church and the other tho Sunday | clerks should be examined by men in the de £ ar was ame Can you give me an old pair of pants, | YOur pa an [ . i + |~ “Siy no more, Mr. Smithers,” replied tracts. The fact is that prior to bis appoiut- | maker has improved at an expense of about | pupils in the Sunday school aud there are | than by one board which examines for the T t stove v\'i""‘ —Eay. trousers, . my man, not | . UW g lady, risin ,\,,,\,‘ And :,A,,“_ went the firm put in bids for many kinds of | $50,000, ' This house is one of the most ele- | something like three hundred teachers. The | whole country panw. ot ™ counts for | fully from the ' Jopness-Miller position government supplies and they made @ great | gantly furnished houses of the capital. Its | school has & maguificent organ and it Tho senators and abou the ‘\'\' l‘:‘ o ' N that she had assumed m.r o moment bes Real of mougy out of them. When Mr. Wana- | walls are hung with satin and it has rooms 50 | has an orchestra of thirty pie Wana- | postmaster gencral busy u ! | 8 pog & U9 § AR WA fore and pointing to the door. 1 pakcr accepted the postmaster generalship | large that you could turn a wagon-load of bay | maker opens it every Sunday and giyes tho | 1 o'clock bofore he gots b ch. | pup v £iVe 1 response to L y Note. will have pa d you a check for ning Quaker City used to pelt him with mud when | the politicians of Washington say he would | of W links are ab an inch w ‘1 want her for a chaperone, Ship's Quohop And e nlghty growth basbeon | ong family, and ho bas two: oharming | is fighter from the word goaud opposition | them. o is teo much of & clvil sorvice mun | long > « or [ Jike o leaf.” d | g y gene v oing to be war,” gencral is a competitor for goverument con- | last adwinistration, and which Mr. Wana- | school. There are about threa thousand | partment in which they are o work, rather 1 A0 WA 8 o ¢ val | Mister in Wi \e guve orders that no bids were to be wado | around in thew without touching the walls. | children » talk. After he has gottem it “’5 He comes back at 8 and works away steadily | FuANK G, CARVENTER, Texas Siftings: Friend—How are you | dollars by the first mall,”

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