Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 7, 1890, Page 16

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE NDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1890-SIXTEEN PAGEBN OUR FALL ANNOUNCEMENT. We take pleasure in announcing to our many friends and the public in general thatour large Fall stock has been received, and is now open for inspection and sale. Our buyer has been busy the past few months scouring the different markets for the new- OUI{ est designs and the very latest productions, and we can safely say, without fear of contradic- OL”{ tion, that our stock to-day excels anything ever shown under one roofin the city. I“llSlrlltC(]Clltill()glIC Our policy, of giving the best terms and the fairest treatment to all, shall be continued, our prices being guaranteed lower than the lowest. Should be in the home of every Or128 pages, has just beenissued We are the largest time payment house west of Chicago, and we recognize no competitors farmer. Order from it and save and will be mailed free on appli- in our manner and style of doing business. Being large buyers, in carload lots for cash only, Balion. It eontains fliustrations we can undersell any house in the city. Below we mention a few departments in which we BFEUhitibe, Sicvag s show an elegant assortment and numerous bargains: e —————————————————————————— Mailed free, on application. FURN[TURE DKPHRT EN --In this department all the very latest design are shown, OUR TERMS and goods that cannot be excelled. The newest finish, OUR TERMS. I R e 16th century predominates; also natural cherry, mahogany, antiques, ctc., are shown. 3 worth of goods, $1 per week or $4 per month. $ Y ¥ $1 per week or $4 per month, $30 worth ofgoods, L s cdlatas 5 as bhee S SR 3 5 N 30 worth of goods, $1.80 per week or $6 per mo. BHRPKT DEPHRTMEN I'his department has been greatly enlarged, occupying one PO or oSt o 8 et o, 60 worth of goods, n o 11di N e o ¢ » latec sote orth of goods, A MO o o entire building in itself. We show all the latest effects in S e U5 pav montn, $90 worth of goods, N1 3 \Hac rminsters I alve: < rrains. ete - M eaQ at are - 90 worth of goods, gorthotgonds, Wiltons, Moquettes, Axminsters, Velvets, Body Brussels, Ingrains, ctc., at prices that are un e et b R S $120 worth of goods, - raae - \ 21 o ofgoods, $3 )\:l*l"w‘evkcin'smfl per month . d])I)l()(lLlLl])IL. S‘?&;\)(Vr‘i:"m-(k(‘nl'$|l‘_’ per month, $200 worth of goods, . . . $200 worth of goods, i PR R L leref e DRHPERY DEPHRTMEN --Our line of Draperies is larger than ever, and the atten- $6 per week or $20 per month. tion of close buyers is especially -invited to this depart- WRITE FOR OUR ment. Our assortment of Brocatelles, Chenille, Silk and Lace Curtains will compare favorably WRITEFOR OUR with that of any house in the city. In Lace Curtains we show new effects in Tambours, Swiss, 128-page illustrated catalogue. Irish I’oint, Bl’llSSclS, N()ttingh;lms, ete. 128-page illustrated catalogue, R STUUK DEPHRTMEN --We carry the largest stock of Stoves in Omaha. This de- Just outpadaled losis antiads mechanic and every house- partment, however, is so sl Wnaseriny ety h:lr(l]y needs any dress, on application, This cata- AN Era o o comment. Our entire line of Heating Stoves is now ready for sale. We have the sole agency P kiR Rt - o md in Omaha for the following brands: Lilly Wrought Steel Ranges, Universal Stoves & Ranges B e ke caed 2 & Banner Stoves and Ranges, Estate Stoves and Ranges, Golden Rule Stoves and Ranges. ik Illustrated Catalogue money. It contains illustrations of all kinds of househola goods. and we will cheerfully mail you one. ¢ wish to thank our many friends and the public for their liberal patronage, and we ask a continuance of it, with the assurance of the lowest prices, bes A%y h to thanl friend 1 the public for tl liberal patronage, and ] t f it, with tl f the t best ment and prompt shipments. Respectfully, PEOPLES MAMMOTH INSTALLMENT HOUSE. 818, 818, 617, 619 North 18th Street, Between California and VWVWebster. OPEN AT NIGHT. B. ROSENTHAL & CO., PROPRIETORS. TELEPHONE 727. L DDA T TNIOT S it ooy e s i, et e TG “REATMO S0 STER Y it oot reatan ceinin | i o 0 s b i i i oo on- | Tomplar wore o shirt of mail reaching | ligious ser and’ preside over funcrals 1 did this thing once, but I never | years ago In those days he drove for business attire below his knees, made at first of | does nor make them religious, and he wha i n, George Holman, He got rich and is now 3 tenuated upo re | iron scales fastened upon a leathern | finds his religion and his Christianity at the : ing of paying customers, gamb- | owor of a ino farm und several fust horscs, of good sacial brceding. Pluco among theso | bady, one overlaping tho other, thus bo lod toom, andnsver feols tho atod of e ifo i 3 ers are t best, as they | AlMonroe was a familiar figure around the v Tnitd . f , | white necktied brethren one arrayed in Solo- | stowing upon its wearer the appearance of a | ehurcl, is wofully defeetive jn his § The Lifs of the Heckman in the Gata 1, 0, question ‘the rates, | hotels and depots ten years a0, but fortune | HOW They Initiate Infant Masons in Cape | [ \CREUL L0 othors n flowiniz gowns and | numan fish, | This martial garment was subs | whit religion and what Chvistinnit Clty‘ “There arn’t any gamblers, did you say? | happened his way and with £10,000 in his Colony. rbans, as must be done to enact an initia- | sequently supplanted by a shirt of chain ar- The for while a view of Chief Seavey may say that and he may make | pocket he went to Buffalo, N. Y., ‘where te tion “in’costume,” and the inconsistency of | mour, made of metillic ring >rla entitled to the utmost_considerati some people bel 8 3 about as | now owns and opers E ats. i : v b it e oats, the funovation becomes so apparcutas to pro- | closely to defy entrance throu el poit of view, |,,,,.,‘ pornitil Ko S| (4 1 | big games now y ever ss the son George was another old timer. He made .- voke merrin ol raiment of a gen- | pointed weapons, a defensive arrangement | stanc le sturdy criticisu involved BERECTIORTHEICRATTREORECUREERS) police don* v But that | money, went to Wyoming in an early THE CHAPEL AND THE LODGE ROOM. | i piicon s imited to the e of an .lu|- ed .n._{ solld plate armour, which did s, ch as'the following from was not what I was talking about. Newspa- | but returned and is now in Kansas City run- ot o apron, while in addition to this the oftice not come into vogue until long after the Tem- her clerical writer 2 er men come next in the matter of paying. | ninga saloon. are allowed to append their distinctive jewels | plars were extinet. On Lis head the armed T'he church should study to find out what The Sights and Experiences of a Class | iy, ars all good fellows, and most of them i Tom O't i d;-n\' uml»k«i;. Omaha \\-‘n.-n Un forms Among Masonic Bodies and | to collars more or less ornaviented 'rh.r» in- | kuight wore a metal cap, very flat and low, m-l!wfltu; hwhima.w ;1 n\v«lm» the average f People Whose Glory Has De- pay without quibbling on p t was considerable smaller than it is today. s s & ant a brother arrays himself in o uniforn | made after the style of w saucepan, us casques [ man, and then, insofar s lies within its 2 Rrp e Sabiagy The Lord deliver me from saioon keepers. | He 1 in the suloon business in Kunsas City, Bbesoriptiohlofinplnishta 3 Masonty i3 hold in aboyance, as he is 10 | and plumes wero uninown. €0 that. genpra- | province, it should strive to give him that o pArtel A D You would think they would pay a hackman, or, whose place of business is at mplar of His- longer on a level with his fellows, and so | tion. Owver this military avray the Templars | 1ts equivalent, And here the church has of Motor Cars. but they 3 ¢ drive a hac ud Douglas st r hack for tory! stringent is obsorvance of this Su- | sported rcoat of white linen, its front | much to learn. Does the lodge furnish keép shy of saloon men, for they will always | 8ix years. He made moucy and is now able rope that, wero o militiry man o visi adorned with his_characteristic ¢ross. Un- | watcliers for the man who is uigh unto 1 to take the price out in driuks or | to draw his check for a considerable amount. - lodgze, be would be divested of ‘mirk of | armed he wore s flowing robo of the samo | deathi Doos it it his bereaved ““”!l#? T e aa aot o1t oate o o | FoubvouTdaws: Mike Roche, who drives No. 7, has the dis- g oy his profession capable of being removed, | material, with the cross on the left breast. does not suffer! The church, of cours The town is not what it was two years | "Wy police hate hackmen and this hate is | tinction of driving the first landau that was [ According to the South African Freemason, [ pvep 't a decoration won by bravery. e R can mot be a life jnsurance company, bu ago,” mused a hackman the other day as he | kiyd of a mut affair, too. I don’t know | ever pulled in Omaha. It i old quarter- | there was recently performed a v nterest- o In V Degree to Work., it can and it ought to make it sure that stood upon the curb stone and watched the | why this is, but they have an idea that we | curtain aud was brought from Chicago. It | ing masonie s partially in public, by Another Ancient Relic i The Canadian Masons are in somewhat of a | none of its humblest members are ever d crowd hurrying by to catcha motor train | arcall thieves und cut-throats. Now, I want | has chan vever, and is only a the Lodge Jubilee, one of the four re r | . Another Masonic relic of presumed an | quandary as to the riety of introducing | tituteor forsaken. To besu cull profe el faitell something on the quiet.” OF all Ehenl “}"’! et Befaun Loy o | tiauity has been extumed the island of | fia"A) 2 ! s | 0 do this, but is this service for the we G P Ton costigation of | the hackmen in the city during the past two | Of ‘the old timers who are now in the city, | Wnder the jurisdiction of the Grand Orient of | Copfy'in the shape of a bronze square and f «d degree in pluce of | lumbs of the flock always performed cheer musing of the man led to au fuvestigation of | vours ot haif a dozen of them have been ar- | actively engaged in the business there are | the Netherlands and practicing its ritual in \pass, discovered while digizing out the | francioting gencral business in the fisst, as | fully, and tactfully, and thoroughly? It is the business known as hack-driving. One of | vested for committiig a crime, which fact | such w n men as Charles Moore, Joe | the Cape Colony, although its members are | cellavof a wine dealer in a vineyard, where | jha custom in every part of the universe | 1ot an unbeard-of thing for a secular order to the old-time drivers was sought and upon ap- | leads me to beliove that if the police watched | Gorman, “Swede” John, “Rocky Snglishmen or of Iiritish descent, The | Were likewise found a number of gold e e el S Prior to 1834 il | boast that it cares move for 3its meimborst Plying the pump, talked freely. a little more criminals and didu't spend so | fel Jdack Priest, better known as 5 Lo reurred in Freomusons hall, | trinkets and other ornaments of undoubted | Yy, lodges 1d in tho lowermost | than the chureh does for thoSein its fold, | S0 you want to know something about | Much time watching the hackmen, they i 1. Clarke, Charles Berkman, Ly o 4 a ¢ i ll, | antiquity. The king of Greeee appropriated | mate and no ver Ay us be able to assort 4 negativeto that fai BRS YOS WRNLHA,K £ UOOUL [ would be serving the community much bet- | Taylor, Tony Damansky, Charles White own,upon a Sunday morning,and were | the latter for his museum, but conceiving the | GEaEIEEE FFCEOETR GRE Continuing | whenever it is uttered. “One of the chief backs, hacicmen and the business, do you ter. % nquette and Al Brown. witnessed by a large gathering of brethren nze jewel to be of no value he allowed ivto | 1500 the firet would confer upon ape | tractions of these resorts is the spiritof f He was assurcd that that was the purpose |~ “Of course, we see all sides of life, and | ‘These men are all well off and usually have | and of invited guests, prominent among | be to London, where 1t is to be treas- | 1 N8 110 Griviloge of voting, which o | teruity which prevails there, If our cl of the visit after midnight we see ull kinds, but what we | all the work they can handle whom were distinguished ladies. At 110'clock 2d amaug tho curiosit Possession of | contended should belong exelusively | couldbe made the Jillying-ground for “Well, to begin with, there are about one | 5€¢ we never give up, for you know it would 5 oy O Al oAt g the Lodge Quatuor Coronate. Unfortu- |y masters, A gravo conside who hiave the social instinet” they would e tlo St heroare about one | ) 5o'to give away the sccrets of the 'pro- Resolutions of Condolence. thelodge was opened in due form, the un- f jae01y iy is a plain metaliic afa (i e ¢ | be socasily turned sside to seenlar 1 hundred and fifry of us who earn our dollars | 784" At the last meeting of the Omaha branch of | initiated remaining in the vestibule during tered and corroded, without n- | oA e apprentica ‘learn y eloments | Man is grégarious by nature. He likes by eateriuge to the whims of the public and | Mivery few duys you hear of some fellow | the brotuerhood of painters and d - the progress of the Masonic labors | seription or means either for ascertaining | o¢" 1" o I Ra o (Anar G B ith e h his kind. Tac ol 5 most :‘. :\':n:‘.\:«‘\;:‘ 3 ‘\\kvll‘ul:‘lh:dwl.nlll‘l‘ll‘}l:‘wlul'u \‘\4.:,3‘ has llu-; n ..;:»;»-1{\»;’ @ Imv:(m..m. but | America the following resolut vere | within the temple. Preseutly two "!ln-«lu -u’nnm: ' “l"”‘llvll‘(lhl‘ ;‘;.-:n\-l.m. labor!” In Europe a year of apprenticeship | -;. pl‘(.u,‘l\mnlm 5 m; ¢ oare cetio cn I speak of hacks, I mean hacks, | don’t you believe this fora minute, becanse it m have applied. some- | iperatively demanded before advance. | their obligation to minis cabs, landaus, co hansoms and Victori; I'll teil you wh A man comes down town Wi vhat st re th their hunt after s chi i i [ » ) I yo! Y. A man comes d o hereas 1 1s with deep regret that the | oo i { what stranze that in thei I ment to the next grade, which, its title | of man, In the busi are all known as hacks | with a big roll.” He is pushed up against a | members of this union recelved the commu- | €dch beari an infant in - his | giquities Masonic travelers appear to have [ fuiniiS tO MR RS GTONS (tended for and the men who handle them are known as | game of draw, fills up and loses his money, ot | nication that our worthy * brother, Fiink und passed into the lodge room with | overlooked some very public objects, the first e The hackmen. goes to a sporting house, where he 1s drugged shinidt been removed from our ranks by burdens afte short ceremony, o whtof which should rivet the attention of an 13 M. 0. Maul will leave on the 10th inst, for “There is a lot of follows who wear bottle- | and robbed, und then, dead-drunk, 15 tumed | 46uth. Theretore be it YOS 2 TRATI e term companion used by.fove v tesolved churter of our on be | thestrains of an or \d the voices of the | Observant Mason. Forinstance, thereis rest- | ovirossive or comprehensive our word | Montreal, to attend the sixth annual session green uniforms and plug hats, but those men, | over tous. In the morning he wakes up. Rosolved cliny thocharter ot our union | a i middle arch of the loft hand en- | ¢ O TRmpIets bt Al Masoni GpI fesrntatisn we cut them, cut them cold. finds his pockets ompty, aud then gives |1.ul|i .rlln‘.llly.‘::xlm mourning forsixty days; und belt | brethren chanting an impressive hymn ac fellow, the addition, eraft, being a super of tt al Masonic relief as in R uce of the venerable Abbe Royal of Saint fluity,’ and yetit is' sl 'to” designato the o , the stables on call carriages o > that the hack-driver robbed hi Fibave Lot & copy of this resolution be | companied theim entrance, This incident ex- enis, o Westminster of Parls, throug FUAGRULR L v which convenes in that city on Septomber 16, as ‘cuffers.! o8 Ao hat the hack-driver robbed him. Resolvel, That a copy of this resolution b I\ Denis, the Westmin f Paris, through % to be nttasned in learned socic e B S B R 40 R L, ] 3| UL want to tell vou something that oughtto | sentto our'late broters tmily, and "pubi | plained the motive for *the lodge's convoca- | whicll all must pass desirous of ig the s Ll e a min ; LUbeon 3 of them, We don’t have any use for ‘cuffers’’ | convince the people that we are as honest as | Lished i the columns of the Painters Journal, | tion to have been the creation of ro | tombs of the monarchs of France i He hen acknowlodulng & i’ | action on matters relating to the aftording: “Don't know what their business is Sh6. gencral, boolicy thay We\are a8 honost 88 | alu Ta OxAnA B, and & oopy sproad on | HOH to lave boon the creation of what or 3 ] grado in standing employ the word iante, « el e R effigy of our Saviour, the right hand placed in o ono nttiched 1o the Socety as & mem: | relief to worthy distressed _brother Misan Vell, let me tell you. They cle some bad men in our ranks, A man owns an | YUFminutes. S lagun Lewises in l\.]un h, that 1s to | S5 GGition as to give accurately the most },'}:I‘.‘l“],‘,,,'l‘,,“, o aly allapprentices | - Mr. Maul has been the M v dekate serateh horses, work about the stubles & outfit that is worth §1,500 to §2,500. He pats B e Beo b1a5 he infant children of Masonic parentage | prominent sign of Masonry. The church was | jotomo maste : vdibly short time, | for soveral years. Del e meotin r. Birney cures catarrh, Bee bl AR the f hile become mast to funcrals mostly, and by so doin us onto his hack in_the morning, without g J i) 4 nce amberg of e fiale '»‘\“ hile in the | copstructed centuries since and as the placing [ ATORE P00 LI OV Indifferent on | are appointed by th asters of the to make about 0 onth and their bond or a scratch of a pen to show Strange Reptiles, b Iw\wmnu Idm(u.nwl American or | of i hund could not be aceidental, this stone | g Giatton varioms jurisdictions. . There ute usually “There goes another and the hackman | that we will ever return; he trusts RArang ¥ glish Masonry, but very prova monument suggests a variety of speculation : - ubout seventy-five in attendance. looked after a departing motor train as it irely to our honesty as regards the | An extraordinarycroaturcof this time | the continentof Europe. After ul e y it s 3 swung around the loop and left him contem- | cash we turn in and the trips as m; It we | Was the *fish-lizard,” writes Teresa C, | half an hour the doors of the The sharp difference of intere wn by 1.0, 0.1 pluting the dollars that might have been | were such a tough lot of men as we are | Crofton in St. Nicolas, It hud o head | thrown opento allow cutrance for the invited A Hint for Temple Builders, AR AR R R A e e e th made had ot cloctricity driven the bob-tail | painted, do yon think any business man | like a lizard, jaws and tecth liken evoco- | EUStS: We haye been requested, says an editor, to L ortan t tuain onncnad [ inar ORI RIS PRIl S ADDOM ear to the wall and the hack to the stabie. would take sich chances! the backbone of a fish, the paddles HOW INFANT MASONS ARE MADE. suggest thut, in view of the prevalent mania | dttachment thy ¥ ' o 18 grand [oAgo iV “But 1 was going to tell you something | | “We foed more 03By Yo | el hale A il bl Axa et ot ey wero received by stewards in full | for temple biilding, some brothe archi- | the ailegiance they yield their lodge lus ro- | the grand lodgo was neld av Beatrice i more about our business, “continued the | let a man who is deadbroke come up Douglas | 7% WhlSs W16 a0 LK WAC WL 00 evening dress and passed ‘into the loc teet or builder by profession, would find it to | cently become an intenscly interesting Heekt Eho gasid bodyirlll ook ks cily ariver, *Ten years ago, fair week was good | street and the first man ho strikes is a hack | & 9 REds ] chamber beneath an arch of Howers formed | his advantago to supply the craft with a | ject of investigation among wide-awake, | e thire ay in October, anl Lo for from §25 to'$3 per day, but now we have [ man, and Tam proud to say that not one of [ animal was discovered in England by a | by the members, ranged face to face in a long s of dosigns of the exteriors and interiors | 1Y nhom of tha shuroh-af.todey | omuiteo hos ‘taken’ alops to pix o got tohustle if wo make 'expenses, though | the boys ever refused to give hungry man | country girl, She used to make her liv- | yow, who held over the visitor long wands, | of edifices futended for Masonie p RGP SIB EIARHLME Ledl £ Gt T et some of the boys pull outa fair amount each | the wherewith to buy a meal. ing by selling fossils, which were very | trimmed with garlands of roses aid othof | accommanied by an estimate of thelr probable | sort. They are beginning to feel there is | fPho sovereign grand lodge mectsat month.? < ““The city council got funny a whilo agoand [ abundant in her native place, One day | flowers. Each guest was conducted to the | cost respeetively. It must be borne in mind | something iu it too subtle for demonstration | Kan., on the 2Ist inst “You see, it is liko this, The motors have | passed a lot of ordinances that I £ ade us a lot | she disce d some bones projecting | e { after being welcomed by the master | that a Masonic ball should, iu strict couforu- | unless they should have to tell some things | Ruth lodge, D.of R will givea knocked out our day trado to Council Bluffs, | of trouble at first, but wo get along all right | from clifl, Cleaving u e rabbiste | assigned achair which, as well as the | ity with the spirit_of the constitution, be | upout the churches which might b dis. | musical and literary entertainmen South Omaha, the fort, and in fact, most of | now 1iate e \ bel b lodge furniture, was tastefully decorated | dedicated to Masonry used for Masonic 195 q urday evening. Special arrange our long trips. ugh' once in o while we “If you let your lights go out; if you fail to | She found that the pelonged to she | i (DT o O Then com- | purposes solely. It occupies @ position | 8ETecable soun been made to provide a good pr cateh o wedding, and o wedding, if the | wear ‘@ badgé showing your number; if you | Skeleton of un animal embedded in the | menced the publie ceremony of Ma- | precisely similar to that of @ church The Church versusthe Lod Was & | Cmpe team of Hesperian encampine groom is any good, means a fiver, even if wo | fail to keep your e-book ina conspicious | rock. She hired some workmen to dig | sonic vaptism of an impressively devo- | buildin and is not to be | subject of discussion among some preachers | o South Omaha lust Friday ni doregdrive any more thau a block.” place, o u leave your team unhitched | out the entive rock, and the monster | tional character, interspersed with sacred ceratod stion, even in part, 0 | and church-writers in the cast recently, | the degrees inthe camp rece “*While | am speaking of weddings, I'want | you are liable to get into trouble, and the proved to be thirty feet long. What a | music and the singing of hymns, in the final 58, 8 in the case | 4nq one writer thus ¢ s with the question X to tell you of one that happened six years | police watch for these things, sensation it created! That region, | one of which theentire assembly joined. In | of our mugnificent ter the ground floor is ago. 1 don't give any names, but I will “Tips are our own, thank the Lor v e s found to be a | conclusion the master madea short discourse | sublet for comm 5 mercantile enter- | AU 1ssue I'he Lo using the term to in that both parties were on top of the social | get several. Take the eminentl, AR g, oW ¢t conder- | Wherein he expluined the meaning of the | prises. We believe that there exists but few | clude the meetings of the various secret or- Feminine, But M swim, The groom hived ten hacks to carry | man and when he comes down town to veritable g yard of the won( word Lewis, said'to have been derived from | lodges located outside of cities und popular | ders —will be found strongly intrenclied all the friends to b X He settled the bill { and the ‘lodge’ is so attractive that he ful animals, jaws of some | g desire to place the infant Mason under pro- | towns but would erect a Masonic hall did the next day, and each’ driver got £10 and a | get home until 1 or 2 o'clock in_the morning, | of them we 3 feet long and con- | tection of St. Louis of Frauce, and made | they know the exact cost to be incurred in bottle of champagne. That was o wedding | he always tips the driver with 2 or & lest b tained 160 teeth, Whenever a tooth | clear the nature of duties assuj by th its erection and furnishin A handsome that did a mans heart good will give the s way. Those lodges, 1| was lost ina conflict, ¢ licate tooth | lodie aud by the sponsors acting on behalf of | edifice of an appropriate architecture would, | votion of men from the church, ) often “Funerals are no good, and if they were, | sometimes think en worse than hack > 5 Ihnadl |\l > most prominent obligation | we are certain, proy uatnent to a thriv- [ from the straightforward sery their the stables get them, though once in a while inthe jaw wi dy to take its place. b o LIOAGY S . being to hoi t their parents and | ing village and eventuate in a good fiuaucial | Master. Recent figure we have 1o getinto line, for you know if a this point the hackman | Lheir oy wero larger thanu man’s (¢ o%0 tham tn their after life. Upon tor- | insestment, sugmenting as the population in W that Boston has rich man dies it is frequently the custom to | caught » passenger and merei and possessed of very powerful and | 1iation of the services the guests were | creases. Still in desiguing the building there o5 5 Brooklyn, 455 churc hive fifty or seventy-five hacks and then hire | worked the whip over his horse as he started seing vision, so that no matter how | yshered into the refectory to partuke of cake | are certain rules to be observed, known only \\ ashington, 181 churches t mourners to follow the corpse to the grave. | out to earn a couple of dollars. 'k the sea nor how far distant the | and of wine, each one béing presented with | to the craft, which cannot beebserved in | cago, 354 churches to 1,058 “There ave still some pretty fair trips left, carly all of the Omaha hackmen prey, there could be no escaping the @ piece of the christening cake and wo know whero they Take the gle inen and good livers, and wh road houses for instance, A stranger comes | of them drink, the © many otk to town and wants to have ahighrolling | are absolutely mperate, never touching adoptec lodee members made their appearance, Dr. Birney eur She is an American marricd through the country: in numbers | man, aud she tells you this funn, aud power, and everywhere detaching the de 1t a famous little b thed to her st marricd him, says the uis Said sho I was a littl weadher, 5o when she called 1 had o come to my boudoir. On my writ 8tood i picture of my husbi 1 given me when I first met hin, and whic | was framed very gorgeously in silver. Afton istrous | halls improvised for lodge purposes within | same proportion obtains in o adivg | she had tal it herself a little whilo eyes! Its stomach was like a great | affair elaborate arnished with Masonic | buildings erected without knowledge as to | ie In the face of this state of -’Nm' 2 e | (ho went over to this picture, gave it the pouch, and it swallowed its food without | emblems. But one toast given and drank | the distinetive character of their itended oc- | ehureh tielploss t |\\H“’I‘l.l utleast 1t can | ynost loving look, and suid: Ah, ho had th \ ¥ chewlhg. 1t was &0 greedy amonster | With d honors th, wealth and nts do. Through its preach press, i time, We run him against one of the road | liguor. g 3 prosperity o the newly made Lewises.” L through the hyes of those wholoveit, itean sct houses, of which there are half @ dozen. He | Of hackmen there are threo classes, the | that it ate even smaller unimals of its - The Templar as He Really Was. tho cliims of the church farabovethoseof any | Wt oL IBE G0 T S fer saying ‘Did ots pretty well loaded before he starts, aud | men who own their own rigs, those who work | OWn kind! ¢ The Uniform and Costume Mania. A correspondent inquires information as to | order whateve Give men to understand | poe And then I reached out and got u little ¥ the time he gets there he is shot, He has | on a comumission and those who work by the Nobody can say for certain whether the The craze for usiforming Masonic bodies | the correct garments and material accoutre- | that, however interesting and helpful the | ouge from the table just beside me, opened i§ 10 settlo though, and in most cases nothing | month (i skin was covered with scales ornot. | and of performing labor in costume, which | ments worn by the Kuights Templar prior to | lodge may be, it can nottake the place of that | o ghowed her the pleture inside, 1t was less than §10 goes, Now you might thiuk the Of the first, of course they own all they | Still, as no remains of scales have been | has been extending rapidly within the past | the supp sion of the orde whether | divine institution, the cnurch. The nw'\w; the heads of my husband myself taken price steep, but what “difference does it | earn; those of the second get one-third of tho | found, it is probably soft and smooth, It | tWo years, says an eastern w is growing | the representutions of them so frequently | that one is about us good us the other can 4o other on our wedding trip and then | ane malke! 1f we don’t get it, he will blow it all | proceeds and the owner of the outfit fur- | hud'td come up to the surface to breathe, | Eradually into an incabus upon the prosperity | seen upon commandery cards e reliablet | be entertained for s moment owever faE | Mo R N et i o e .y fn on wine and women, aud such men are | nishes ¢ hing and takes care of the | ihc 10 BOME b B0 HEE SAFTUCE 1O WS | of the ecaft, as far us its intellectuality is | Inanswer we say that the Templar of old, as | the church falls below the ideal of its Lord, it | don ' think she will boro me again You legitimate prey. Seot team. The ‘men who work on a salary re- | 018 & while, and perhaps AU\ oopcerned, inasmuch es few of those workers | depicted by the Templar of today, 1s errone- | still stands as His visiblc Feprosen ative 001 couldu’t help but laugh, it was such an 1y, “What do we do with dead druuks! We | ceive from £ to & and ure expected to put | hud “blowers™ to blow out water.. What | eqrning thieir livings by the sweat of their | ous in the extreme, ‘inasmuch as he is rep- | the carth - the minister of His sucraments, | onsiy womanly thing t do, try uot to catch them, but if we do, we take | in from twelve to tifteen hours a day. a commotion it must have made? | bpiws can conscientiously indulge in the un. | resented as a knightin armor, his head in- | the defender of His truth, the ( \~|‘un\| .‘u' e pare of them. If we know a man, we either | The history of the Omaha hackrien is an - y necessary extravagance of @ needless attive, [ closed in o helmet with open visor and | His gracious N‘_“J‘}““ 10 e ‘l“' o ‘,ld Dr. Birney cures catarrh, Boe bldg. teep him in the hack until he is sober or | imterestiung one. Jimmy McMichael was the Dr. Birney cures hay fever. Bee bldg, | There are scveral lodges in this city which | erested with flowing plumes. Oun the con- | some of these orders cuploy & chaplain an N taken for me.) Augeyl Of ¢ wig angery, but my native wit didu't desert me. T

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