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THE OMAHA DAILY BEK: THE DAILY BEE OMATIA NATIONAL BANKS costrictions and diseiptine. Tt would | why most womon do not maery,” she | Now England are in tho samo toreitory, | singe, bub untortunatoly PASNING JESTS, ) y; )] ) ) . ; ; - = . nmary of the condition of tha | cortainly seem that in viow of what | says. *is bodiuso thoy have not had a fespocially afong the vich valloy of the | there is w0 botter renson 80 | (qonor and Furnisner: Head Dicesmaker 1. ROSEWATER Soiror wional batks of Omaha of & re- | Amevicin inventive taleat has dono for | chance.” Sbe dantes that the highered- | Conneetiont. It cannot bo said, there- | oxpeet that it will have any more tne [ 1 o tit young Miss FHppant is vunning = | cont date is published in the commaercial | the progross and materinl welfare of the | ucation has had the effoct which Mres | fore, that it is only tho barren hillsides | fluonce now than in the past. Asa mat- ‘:l‘v quite an account WL sho pay upall slumns of this issue of THE BEE. [t is ntey that every reasonable and nee- | Wells aseribes to it. Women have not | and worked-out lands b 4‘ have lost } tor of fack the stagoe is no we so fn oy | ASAIAtant -0, ¥ TEFRNE OF $UBSCRIPTION, strikin shibit of the soundness of vy provision should be mado for en- | become intelloctunlly oqual to men. [ their population. The t o {8 with | respoct now than it has ever been, if in< | oth Datly n wlay, Coe Yoear. hese institutions and of the stror ng and stimulating this I'hey have not consed to depend or to | the people or the conditions, not with | dead it ho not very much bottor, and the | the ty pewriter e o healthy pulse of the city’s business o : polit ¥ wish to depond, on man's superior mens | the soi tondoney i not in the divection of {undey dice. Ot § | oneof the dullest seasons of the your poears to bo unable to apprecinto this | taland physical strongth. When thoy The chiof canse of the depopulation of | furihor deterioration. Undoubtodly the ( . PUBLISIHED EVERY MORNING. 1 gnoss wo. T Geard (he day that she was lear g Lo W o The total nmount of deposits in the ew or to regard the pat t o they will pob life, and « seinlly mars | the finost farming | and | theat wonld be more s an The learned physician tells us FICEsS )y 1 \ . ", t She Ty nquestiona! sposiee| institution It was con v tho 0 A K Fli fise Baiiy Omaha national banks at the closs of iy greeat importin th riod life, of ifs chiof charm, She state Juest ¥ posi=e| institution if it wa i 5+ t10° | 1ot ke o AL KD Aot Uh LY ¥ on ke filio of. b Fout) roet N oand Mth Stroets, business Fobranry 206 was $14,955,081, 89, congress the patent offi o was stigma an obvious truth when she says that “a | tion of the people. It ia v ngror | nigh standaed that inteliig i P e O bor ot Cammires When it is considored that this showing | tized asn “clenring house for cranks,’' | woman who gives the iden that | thought to be a desieable thing to Colonet Tngersoll woull voquive, but in | The gentle oscutation which e beinge wil Newy A 16, Tribune Building | jq CORRESPONDENCE i eations X t \ ¢ hnl made at the porfod when the fand very likely this was thegenceal [ she is a law unto lersell loses |favmer’s son or a farmer’s da . | that onse thero would bo n vast numbor [y el © 0 s and & lot of disbursoments of business men ave | opinion of itin that body. The found- | her power @f atteaction.” 1t is | The steady drift to the large cent of poople who would give itno support doctor LIS, large and their veecipts comparas | ersof the governmentevidently thought | doubtless a fact that the class of “inte Imost irresistible. Young mon and [ Thees is an olor of humanity which [ Thoy say that with the honey wo are ai so watier should | tively light, and, moreover, that it im- | differently lectual women™ who know more about [ women find nothing in the beautiful and | will not have anything excopt the bur | The At ‘_""_.M AV asE thom 1ip o 8l Depurtment succeds atime of unusual | PARK ND BOULEVARDS. evorything, including polities, than men, | peaceful lifo of vural Massach nse 10 | losquo and clownish, and it eannot lip. b BUSINESS LETTERS stilbranay { ‘ vieel st ik . i | ook upon martinge with increasing | compensate them for the loss of the ex- | and will not bo ignored and solong as | But when a feliow gets a ehance t «n vingency in the money mrket, it mu o 1 | Allbusiness lotters and reittances shontd B 1 10| The cstablishmont of an oxtensive syse | 0 i ATEAARE AT i otk £t ; \ protiy waid, b el re e o e e o Company, | D coneaded to he very satisfactory. The | T ) it 1 | aversion, and that, xo far as they aro in- | citement of fifo in o big town. Heneo [ it s sorvod inoa way that simply |y Vo apt to sa . g tho ot A o R R R R L L vall of dapsita stiows & ot (orsass of ‘:', Lisblot il 1 Lok 'I'”~‘ utevards | g qually concerned, thoir feoling is | they 1ow out of the country and into the | ploases it, without contributing to the ho's i fraid bang "o payabloto thoordur of the com- | g4y, 400,06 ovor the samo item i tho AL L heartily reciprocated by the other sex. | ity in a constantly swelling tide. development of its baser instine J1i sential to the prosperity and growth of . . ing that on the Iatter date the receipts | is worthy of genoral attention when she | plo to exerciso somo charity in com- | may bea time when the stag 1 stor than s bicycle, : THE BEE BUILDIN g he project will undoubtedly meet 2 i 4 " A of the holiduy trade were quite goner | (o 5o L8R G nee from the moss. | S UIT there over was a country | monting upon the movements of popu- | uniformly of thai high intelloctual « Richmond Tecorder: Toboggan and hug Btatoof Nehry and that the present statoment comes | b \ s ot e | Where young men and young women | lation in the west. When a western e which people ke Colonel tn giog hardly ehyme; but thoy manage to ket bk Lt AR ) S ought to marey for love, and to hope for | stato loses o portion of its population it | 8ol canenjoy, but it is far in the future. | there overy tino Coumty of Donielas. (% by 4 the fiear | Umiertaking can expect encourngoment George I Trschuck, secretaty of after the heavy settlements of the firs: from that t T t ¢ | ™ successful future, it is this country. | is soized upon as the oceason for doleful | Allthat can be hoped forat present is fom that quarte o innugurution of ] . Jublishing eonpany. / i | of the yoar, Another henlthful indiea- | 00 0 o ‘” |'” |'|~ I. B Wo have seen that the rent roll, the | pemarks about this soction of the coun- | that the thoater, if it do no good, skall | (oueht thit i woman eannot keep i soorot that (e tetd creilation of T DALY BE avements, sewers and all fmproves : - ke RIS Mgl X , it O tiol @ fact that the lonns anc . dowry and the brown stone house donot [ gpy, S ar developmonts o onst | At least bo harmloss, ) Ak v e o e Week onding March 7. 38, was s | tion is the fact that tho loans and dis- | PR BEEEER CRC B e ry. Similar developments in th foltaws Wit she puts in her shash, and soe if sho 1 vigorous opposition, but the splendid re- Sunday. Marel 1 can't sults achioved proclaim the wisdom aud | Lo 2 1 H | SWORN STATEMENT OF CIKCULATION. | 81ly standing to the creditof depositors Youker's Statosman: It is generally counts are loss by over $1,100,000 than in always bring happiness. Wo read overy | furnish a truer occonsion for such com- _— Nilhye Aol Decombor, and that the cash on hand is ps | e industrinl movemont in the United Moy, Waroh i cofrospondligly lutgot m urday, \'| areh 3 The present statement would seem to firidag, Moroh B ; warrant the conclusion that the finan cial depression which was so marked day that confossion in the details of | ment. The majority of the first sott the divorce court, Therofore, why should | in o new country beiong to o migratory | Stites 18 away from Now Kugland and f New vork Sun HChotlle Hicks was aw : L K K : 1 ; Wy inpertinent at the opera last uight. 1o not two strong young hearts say, ‘Never | class, The Massachusotts country family | i the diroction of tho raw materind and - fE0% SRS SO B0 mind: whose happiness but yours and | on the other hand isan ancient landmark. | tho uitimate macket for manufactured } il the evoning.” " mine? I'hat is asentiment wort to | its removal or disintegration is an | £oods. rarly all the new machinery “That w mora or less of a compliment he marvelous strides made in all the 4 i g i K wasi't it be written in letters of gold where the |event, not merely an incident as foresight of the men who braved the odium of the croakers and pushed the city to its present enviable position. Average v:u;n‘,\“l»\. i‘/m HUCK teature of general business at the close Sworn 10 before we and subseribed in of the year has slakened somewhat, PRSMEANS LI UG RV DL ROl O BT though nominal conditions are perhups Fints ol REbEaKK Notary Publie not entirely resumed. T'he conservative County of Douglas, | ** methods of Omaha bankers are shown Sy LR - | inevery foature of this roport, and it BUllahitig compiny, that. e i 1y therefore be taken forits face value it Corgpation ot T Doy e for 450 | as an indication of the business pulse of April. 15020504 copiess for May. 190, 3,180 | the community T e o b ardoraian: | The national houses aro solidly pros- A b LA TR perous, and that moans that general copiess for December, 10, 21471 coplos businessis on a sound footing, In the e, 1 S4B ot T ok | meantime, there ave many outside indi Sworn fo before me, and subseribed in my | cations for a good year for the city and presence, this ®th duy cfFebruary, A D 1801 | it ikt stato. such | 10w being made for woolen mills is dos- young men and women of America may | things are in the west. b tined for the west. Of 12 now cotton s T sec and study it. Itis tobe hoped that Massachusotts | Mills recontly commencod, two are in | Chicugo News: MeCorkle Noab's fanily The discussion of the modern aspects | will find a way to keep the people on | New Fogland and 10 in the south. Manu- | P8 Grackle (entativoly) - Not of the matrimonial problom by two [hor farms, In the meantime, it is also | fcturers are realizing that it isn waste | McCorkie—Noi they were not in the swim women who have made a conspicuous [to bo hoped that that sensitive soul, monoy to buy raw matertal 1000 | o L e e an suceess of life, hoth in and out of tho | “the castern investor,” will not be | Miles from the factory and then trans= | yumaeried compositor on post prandial cor domestic circle, is intoresting and in- | alavmed at the facts brought out by this | Port the finished product back to tho | temporary who recentiy mads “eubside i T i i , > the r atorinl was committee ont of tho “eribside” committeo of structive. The averago reader will | investigation. ity wh tho ey material was ob- | el 400 ital elemonts of urban prosperity are directly B GUALG G traceable to the enorgy and public spivit that planned and executed what has made Omaha the hest paved and best sewered city of its size in the Union, Like henefits will flow sfrom the es lishment of a system of parks and b oule vards, The experience of the older cities has furnished an instructive lesson to Omaha. New York, Brooklyn and Washington, notwithstanding their ex- tensive possessions in parks and drive s are constantly adding to thei nd —— increasing their number. Cleveland agreo with Mrs. Sherwood, however, —_— tnined. For this reason the west will that wifehood and motherhood is the WILL I BENEFIT LITERATURE? sometime manufacture everything for Lowell Courer: A young tady at Dubugus true end and aim of woman’s life, and | The new copyright law does not go | which it can supply the material and | Iaughed so heartily it hor fover's Jokes that that neither “philanthropy, higher edu- | into force until nost July, and its effoct | will suve a heavy billof freight, besidos | ot S e Wint i trenstin suel o giel cation ov self-analysis™ have yet offered | will not be felt untilafterthat time, The [ gaining the new industries it neods, W be for a paragrapher’s bride, anything better i its pl eastern publishers appear to be very T Notiry Pubile. = 3 —— SOMETHING 10 REMEMBER. and Detroit ave planning costly boule- idoa | Chicazo News: Banker's dauehter (toher | O] usband, just after marriage) —1 want a littio PERFUNCTORY EULOGIES. law and predict that the results will be | that Buffalo Bill can borrow 100 Indians money, Jotin i i It is stated that the ancient custom in | very favorable to American literature, | forhis next trip to Europe. The Husb All rieht, darling draw you \ i A chock hey say that while publishers will [ people on the Nebraskn boeder who | Buikers daughter—No, don't trouble to do keenly compete to get the new books to | Would readily give their consent if he | that, John, forl really Naven't kuown you be writton by the most popular authors | Wished to borrow the whole Sionx na- h”‘\‘“.”,".y,"]'." 4 g —— much gratified over the passage of the [ TH0E intevior department has d THERE is o row in the ranks of the | Congress adjourned without appropri- | vards, laying out new and extending old southern allisnce nearly aslavge as the [ ating a dollar for the destitute settlers | parks. San incisco has expended ey i X ; state of Texas, in Nebraska. The bill providing $150,- | millions in transforming adjacent sand ‘“i‘-“ 88 which calls for the delivery of em——— 000 for that purpose, and for similar sui- | hills into a magnificent bower of heauty, | CUlogies upon the death of a senator or A GrENERAL feling of cheerfulness | forers in South Dakota, was one of the | The park and drive systews of Chieago :'V'"**‘;I;.ln\'-|~I:\~:‘I cfulta s W R L R Ll pervades Kunsas, The legislaturo is | things lost in the shufle at the last mo- its greatest atteaction, Yot at the and by way of iRustrating the per- ot % Geis it A G it Doghy SITLin s TLRIG = \WoR et (oHat-© theso fio best that American writers can s o Advic TR Id et if 1 put this overcoat up TSR G Clola et Preumonia, in ) A man who fighits against manifest dosting | Ve8her money for the world’s fair. The fa lesson 1o bo remembered. When it be- | har ne enrichod by defeat and "; related. [\\ >]l-~u t‘hu time arrived in ‘”‘“ ‘n"l" “'{ '”"l”"'l‘ demand "“‘ "‘\“’ always pets licked in the end New York Recorder: “Wili some boy try 6 ¢ - A6 CATELE 3 ¢ the senate for the delivery of culogios o 1 supply, an 1wy profess to believe —~— this axperiment ' asks a rural contomporar: can stand it, but it wall be gh me apparent, several weeks ngo, that | are now the staunchest advocates of pub- i ‘-I.:.-.x I'v. n. .l ive \ ['f « vfll: i nl{ Ry e eI i R BT L BULERW B6aon O panod, l’..”w|wa_;l_’\mm aks'a iraloon fit.’m'.i‘u on South Dakota considerablo distress existed in the west- | lie recreation grounds, In ten years | cprosontative from Pennsy yrig T T O Ll i | SEgY Loies nosota iegislators shows the following: For | the venture. That1s & way boys have to | ton and lose it on the other side, i functory cha ter of some” of about to adjour ont neountered strenuous opposi- L " L Ly : P memorial services an incident that oc do. They say tney would rather have S———— By this result Nebraska lenrns a se- | tion inand out of the courts, and those ' ) Bt vtho oloda of tholast o the worl of Ameriean weite f the SouTH DAKoTArefused to appropriate lesson ata heasy cost, and it is o | Who fought the several projects the | CUrred near tho closo of the last cong e by e e sty orn part of tho stato, the legis- | Minnonpolis nequived 1500 meves of | YAnin the scnatan from that state who f*""‘ "_h""’ !I-“NH o ;l’j";‘*. L \\_'1 that Tu whole areay of gasoline lamps in | lawre pased @ joint rosolution | parks and drives in oxchange for a | Bad the matter fycharge discovered that | thoy ean ho wel paid otk of o T (¢ | Blalne, 1} Grosham, 9 Huvrlson, 17 Gleve- | o0 = i the suburbs might be dispensed with | memorializing congross to appropeiate | bonded dobtof #53,0M, The ground is | 211 of the sontorswho had known thede- | 1 this shal be the effoct of tho Law 1t 1 tand, 57 Cavtiste, 13 1l 1. tondor ¢an make two. laionades With one without increasing the shadesof night | $1,000,000 to furnish fucl, feed and seed [ now valued at $7.000,000, leaving a congressman, who, by the way,was | Will do a service tha i ’“ fully justify e e fomon, but its tight squcazos ‘,{ in the slightest doegree for the sufferers, The velief committee | handsome margin of profit on the invest- | 40 Unobtrusive, modest man, and the L SLUTHIC SNOISES L HEHOR nEol : ; New Yok by o oSt ! Sl ol nators. | desteubility of. cncouraging and. stma- | s < 4 requested Congressmen-clect Bryan, | ment, without taking into account in- | fOre not genarally known to senators, s Tho Woman's National council did a num I7 cOST Juy Gould 8250 to refuse serv- | McKeighan and Kom to procsed to | creasein valuo of the adjacent property, | Wore absont ffom the chamber. As a | lating thogrowth of Amorican liter ber of thi fng on a New York jury, but he did not Burlinglon I ew maple stgar’’ is on sale i Lit b1 teisd gl one thing it | Boston always was o zo-uhead tow! Washington to urge the appropriation, | St. Paul has invested #345,000 in parks | 1850 resort the senator requested the | ture. and it must be confossed that there | fuiled to do altogether provide for — complain. That amount represented less | and they complied. in ten yoarsand proposes to double the | YErsutilo Vestiof Missouri to say a fow [ eems to bo need of something to Infuso | a primary to sse how many women want the [ Vonkers Guaotte: Whon tho editor of n s A i £ @ e Vit Thara 1 humorous paper sets his wits to work it than five minutes’ income, csnid ot the time that thero | investment during the present decade, | WOrds, which ho-consented to do. 'ho "‘“'l"v\l and vigor into it. There has | baliot. L ) docsn't follow that he works himself, T was no wisdom in eithor of those acts. | Lund which could be had for a triflo | Missourian midoa briof address, which | ravely boen a timo in our history when S T T b Fbidil IN view of the prospects of the cracker war extending to Omaha, the police | g hopo of obtaining $1,000,000 from the | Omahashould profitvy the csperience [ Most affocting he had ever heard, but litc - worle of our people was lowe Ltiho preaant Logislaturewould passi horl @ boasts of old “ancestral halls® should take them by the top-knot and | jational government, and that it was | of others and begin at once to secure suf- | the Most interesiing phase of the inci- than it is at present, and anything that e provisions of ich wore that no cavefully seareh biseuit shooters for o such alofty way ! cealed wenpons, 5 e sl bie il e dent was the fact that the*Missouri sen- | Will bring about an improvement in the | J could run at large, but fow of the Yot those who kuow his parents well idlo to send the congrossmen-clect upon | ficient land for a park sm commen- | ¢ (it B UG s W e e s o e got back to the Are ot antangled by thespoll an errand which the present delegation | swate with the future of the city. [t is | #40r had nevermet the mamhe eulogize LR iR R LILaL LI 2OTYE 2O state capital again. (‘Thie old man drove a dray.) S e bty eiahen ) and did not know him by sight. be honrtily wolcomed. Of such as we - could not hope to perform. The only | notto be expected that the parks and 04kt " f — - 5 to | : t Doubtless this is an altogether excop- | Mve the supply is ample. ‘There is no | In an English drawing room—The Amer possible result of this policy of mendi- | drives can bo developed in one ov five or | o Shiop ter axteD el e i o Christian Sc can girl is pushing —thai she will even mako cancy was to direct the attention of the | even 10 yenrs. Neither should tho pres- | tional ease, but it s nons the less true [ hecessity for encouruging the produc- When a Hannibal -~ Christian scient vay through a_ brick wall, if thero is a country to N ka's misfortune and to | ent gencration of taxpayers pay the | thet a large part of the mortuary elo- | tion of more of this char But if | ctaimed omnipotent powoer over disease the | dukeon the other sid ‘ 5 ‘ e i oy Ao o ol i FEdWat fvo vl conal there is anything better to be had, it is | Courier editor wanted her contined in a roon lay the state open to the damaging crit- | entive cost. The main thing isto secure | 9¢ i A G e L G ol L i L D osra be sontinod i oo York Rocord: *You scem to dislike. fcism of its enomios. This result; and | the land now by means of long time | CONETess reprosents little move of actual |t0 be hoped the publishors, now that | with u patieut in hydrophobia paroxysms, ! thisonly, ws aecomplished by the sensa- | bonds. The development may be car- | Knowledge of the charactor of the thesihity ““"'f"'l'l ”“\" 8 warhichjihoie ), 2ae esiooi st vlgso whee tional appeal to conaress. Not even the | vied on gradually as means will permit, | 300 in honor of whose memory it is ut- ‘]"‘fwf"'"\f‘i'l'f(,"‘:, 1“1)1 Srep l::, s Don't Tondy to Gonld. ST hired @ cook Uiat 50,000 originally expocted forseed was | The upbuilding of the surrounding | tored, and hasnomoro of real sincerity | Poggess, WL ARG Hhand giy Alliance. President. Polk o Governor Norelien of voted in response to the extraordinnry | property and its enhanced value may be | 11 it than did the impressive culogy of i bl ovor ¢ s .1 | the Missouri senator who did not even | Itis not possible, however, to- wholly BeN Brrrer insists that the Ameri- can flag should wave from the north pole. But Ben has had the monopoly of manufacturing American bunting for the last twenty-four years, Tue Fnglish press is delighted with the result of the Canudian election, Political events on this side of the water have recently avoused moro enthusis in Great Britain than at home, Indianapol 1o0ks pr Sue—She request dependea on to take cave of the princi Al il ) “Officlal diguity, when supported by the N ien il keoans. ot hanown | it kunow by sight the dead congrossman | dismiss a feoling of incredulity as to the | dignity of true manbood, always commends e Sl e R Parks and deives are the only sonvee | Who was the subject of his remarks, | possible effect of the new copyright law | itsalf 1o the approval of the American peo Now York Sun: May—What on B ; ! il i - YO The eulogist may et some eredit for | i0 improving our literature, Becauso it | ple. Toadyism in official life they condemn | made you refuse Lord *Sideboard's offert orgotten in the prosperity of 1891, But | of recreation and enjoyment which s B and despise. Pleaso aceept the cordial grasp | Bthel =Well, it's bad enough to ve called “lady” by volicemen and ticket choppers without legalizing the epithet MASSACHUSETTS has again solemnly resolved that she must have annual clectiops and annual sessions of the leg- fslature. Mussachuseits is a vory rich stato and can aflord to hy her little nonsense once a year if she wants to, the people should not soon forget the | Omaha can socure, For that reason the | SU¢h @ performance simply as an - exam- ‘-\;m»‘h;v” o m;lv'w o o | e hr Tt resd s i T lessou which they have learned from the | city should lose no time in seeuring now | Ple of g0l intollectual work of its kind, }.,‘,l]i'ifi,.‘,'."T'.’]"T,L'}f’(i?.‘.","'.i s i o0 | on the day Gould reception, and “accopt, my mistaken course of the authoritics in [ what will ina few years prove of ineai- [ Put it can have no value for the friends e A sineere wishies for the success of your hopes | Chicazo Tribune: Willie—Papa, is it this instanco. A state must bo in very | eulablo value to the health and comfort | Of the deceased familiar with tho eiveum- | OUF own writers will bo any more caveful | g prospocts, swearing to talk avout old socks beiug desperate circumstances when it lonni| of the reople stances, and the tender of sueh | With their productions. On the con- ) —— ‘ e \l:)ll'!w\. el il % ! £ trary, the withdrawal of this foreign BRISKA NEWSPAPER NEWS. anR= ORIy 00 hy . e Willi Cause 1 wish Johnny would keep! ors has disposed of his in. | 1S durned old socks out of my dra ccumseh Chieftain to A, B. trust companies. Fora pittanee of $,00 [ 0UR INEFFICIENT PATENT SYSTEM. | cussed the matrimonial problem in the | 88 the oxposed plagarism of Senacor ;i‘ ! xpeog 1 to le | e o Atlanta Conmtitit ho agreos to reveal uplan which will [ *Tho American people aremare puolific | pages of the Novth ctuerican Rovice | Iigallson one of thoso oceasion dostroged | Of home tithors us te 'l" e R L B s “Here,” said the noct, 1 | elevate them from poverty to afluence. | in inventions than thoso of any other | Mrs. Kate Gannett Wells wrote upon the | the value of all that he said because it | Work r“v ';‘ "”'”: ';“ incrense the |5 gjior and publiser i EalEe oty eeny The public will appreciate this generous | country. Forty thousand applications | topie, “Why Girls Do Not Marry,” and | showed that he had used the opportunity [ number of weiters, but theve isonly very | e Superior Daily Journal has started IEEh a0 tha oditon i iLn) effort to hoist an unfortunate class out patents filed every y and be- | Mes. John Sherwood veplied with an | simply to win commendation for himself, ’I‘-h:i»t“ ]1>.mmlw m.fl'llwl)( h :WIh stan- 1.1"“:11':L:\f;:iv;]‘;fll\n:l“\“ilx;‘l“l a constantly in of the slough of despond. tween twenty and thirty thousand patents | equally brilliant paper, entitled, “Why | It is trae of nearly all these congres- | dardof literavy achievement. It is said R e SO L R e w York Herald: May—Frank i S I 3 A ) b o that effort will bo stimulated ey K «man Brothers have started the Daily nowadays all women are + 1 nnually, Nothing has con- | Women Marry.™ Both wrote from the | sional tributes to the dead that they | tha ol ) e stimulated — when | ywid e airhury. There are already f A atila st i g DAL L THE Ameriean woman will have fall | tribited more largely owth and [ standpoint of the modern American | either scem perlunctory or give ovi- [ Possible—uuthors knowing that they | wooklies peiuted in that town. Blanche—Ah! and that accounts B 3 ! A L i L R e S 2 holGloonsa t 5 dence of strained effort to attain rhetor- | €20 be well paid for their I'he Butte City Times is the first and only | perfeet coutidence in you dearest seape at the world's fulr. She alveady | Prosperity of the country than the in- | womun, who is conced 0 be a some- | ¢ L 8 Bos S and this s doubtloss so. | vaver issuod in the new county to bo uam has her commission and Lo special ap- | Ventive tnlent of our prople. The patent | what diferent person from her countep- | ieal excellence, They do not convey an et e ¢ ; S 80 | Bovd. red Cook is the editor. Tl (e P e ki) proprintions. Sho will soon have hor | Systemof the United States has boen in | part 50 years ago. Taking the sume | impression of genuineness and siicerity, Rl ""“ ar ‘”‘“ publishers bo The editor of the Waco Star announces in | than hen's teeth own builling, designed by 4 woman and | @peration acentury, and it is not only | material for the basisof thei rument, | They lack the warmth of true carnest- llnwy.) o ;rn in ~|]\‘ u .\'l]“u Hl*“‘\’!iv-- pro nl or v“vm- -v"‘v‘m-‘; :‘r ! u"“v‘ylul:nv\x Shags—Hens with teeth, iRy 2 s QNAN A 1 i s wover 1 » r . ductions of possible authors with a view must come to the frent m ubstantiaily crected under the supervision of women, | seli-sustaining, in which vespect it is | they arrived at opposite conclusions, ness, and however lofty the panegyrie, 3 o '” \motiaan dltemat Ll or the Star will cease to twinkle ow York World: Scicnce If the gentlor sex does not cover herself | uniqu ut pays into the national lls assumes that mateimony | however fluent the eloguence, and how- |10 mproving u]l* vican litevature and The Sonth Sioux City Sun has di a way to make musle vist with glory at Chicago in 1803 it will not | treasury @ surplus revenue of oy s co iy the place in women's | ever admirable the diction, it merely | encouraging -,‘)"“_“'I' This vory besond tho boriron and in tsplace appen Mustwe also see *Annie Rooney : e e C 29, gl e e i > > Hhiasen e PR e e S s of business men are not akota County Democrat, by A. McCor- 3 be becanse Uncle Sam las not given her [ $200,0000 year. The accumulated pr minds that it formerly held, to the exclus- | pleases the ear, but d Hob pesch ] B e Thavity fn | mick. late of the Dakota Clty Ardus. Picayune: Tho strongest churcter achance. The rosult will heawaited | it 0f the patent oflico over andabove all | ion of all other interests. She finds the | the heart. - There aroof course notabie | HOLed for byt @ HORE,BABELY Another morning daily has been started at | “Evangeline) s the heifer. It takes two withgroat interest, expenses amount to a fund of nearly | young woman of toduy a very different ceptions, and o number of such are to | bohall of possible authors, or for exeep: | jrastngs, This time it'is the Repablican, by | M0 © P g 24,000,000, all of which has come out of | porson, by instinet und teaining, than | bofouund among the eulogics of the last tional patriotism in desiring to elovate \\‘\ lp‘,;:n\l:‘h-“(hyq-..\ ud it gives promise of Munsoy's Woekly: ~You Mot ot the pockets of inventors, and not one | the young woman of foi r days, She | cou e, sincere, soulful trib. || American literature, = They are very | St o Rty ) SIMEEYeN- 1 oise ‘me, (ieorge,” said the young wif cont of it from the payers at large. [t | has discovered that man is not her intel- | utes. worthy of those to whom they woere | ieh in the: habitof )"'-f'"‘" only that “Tne oditors of the Wymore Union-otor, | yiiild OIS alwv “{;f':,:“",‘,‘x',}‘\l ,‘,1“,,“» A is therofore the inveators, and nol the | lectual superior and that ho is not to bo | pmd and honorable to the intellects and | Which is backed by a solid - reputation yhose troublos have beoi mentioned {u T v ur geveral public, who maintain the patent | married simply because he is a man, | hearts of their authors, but wero these | and hus an wssured market, and while | Bun brg foported tohave rotiral from busi Aireuienod Gaorge sle office and who have a right todemand | Life presents to her a broader horizon | separated from the mass of memorial | they must take some chances they do of the publication B . "This would siuk d I 1 1 1 - nsalBishia 1 P the most efiicient service it cangive [ than that on which her grandmother | matter that encumbeis the pages of the | 10t doso from an unselliish desive to do- papers hererabonts seem to thiuk them. Butsingulnras it may soom, this | looked. Marviage is but one of the | Heord, commemorating the charactor | V10D new authors or to encourage liter- | thero is datigor of the Giiroaieleand Roporier | Hoston Travelior:'Th — hope to gain more than itis sure t lose —_— L EnciienuiiaRionid toctatofiin i mealils i A AU Th ol i B ANEW Youk philanthropist comes to | by such an exporiment. WOMEN AND MARRLAGE. the goneral regard the character '(""”" i bl Sl Ui the rescue of the strugeling banks and — Twobright women hnve recently dis- | of these memorial services, Just | 'O Ame 1 works, might very reason- ThE manufacturing eity of Pullman is notas great a benefit to worlingmen ns people imagine. The Pullman company owns everything and runs everything. Its orders are law, and it does not hesi- tate to exercise its autoeratic power. The men who recently refusod to accept a reduction of wages and struck, have been ordered to va © compuny s houses and move out of town. And move must even if they eannot find shelter anywhere for ther families ontside of the poorhouse, aresomo poople : etabll Daaper war, Says the A F e R R T P not for years received the considera- | cording to Mrs, Wells, it is frequently | and senators who died during the last | that theirestablished methods and pol- | your minds b at rest, Woio ton [ Arn i IBX AR BRI EU R Ik kLI tion it requires in order to | the leastdesicable one at that, " | congross, thels'quantity would be email jioy willle materlully changed under | bronokolo be drawn intowmudaliaghig cin- | acound give it the highest cficioncy and use- | Mrs, Wolls states three principal vea- | in comparison with that of the so-callea | the operation of the copyrizht law, so R I SOGHT RIRTIIRIE s | s Clara fulness, aud if its prosent administration | sons of the decline of matrimony amony | eulogics unworthy of prescrvation fasunlonabing Amorioan wrlkom arolcons [idayiin thevaokiifn ) our new hat. Well, it's simpiy s the fact is not due to uny greater cou- | thropy, higher cducation, aund solf- | DESERTED MASSACHUSETTS FARMS. Ixis kailio honod $link il inrawmisa. of i FAAIERE LR MRS CUNSLAORA SUT AT 3 ; cern for the service on the part of con- | analysis.” Philanthropy, she says, has | v of agriculture in New Fng- | 1ore (avorable conditions for Amorican | consolidated witn “the Horald, democratie, | Spinster T came vors near ining Yonrk merchants lnve tendored | pposs taught young women that they shall | land is u well-worn thome of discussion, | 2UVI0rS and American litovuture will bo | the hropristors of the Sun purchasing tho | sevoral tiuos, but th Laavagsliy a testimonial to Secretary Blaine for | © 1 the curreht num f live for humanity rather than them- | but heretofore all statistics on the il lsed, There ls unqueationnbly N eI iran ol b e SRRt NG | MM 8 the success of his efforts to establish i reciprocity. The testimonial comos in , 08 in od in the f another kind of slip Mr, Park Benjamin points out the fauits | selves, Tt has taught new social duties | jeet have been gonfined to V mont, New good season to answer the ungenerous Sun, 'he Blair Advertiser will bo re d fact in the system and suggests the remedios, | 2 ven seope for the love and tendor- | Hampshive and Maine, A fow months | 0 01Y 1102 i \heieuliagiawiiionif S B to Seali i enagiatedivini fha She Wandored Wh soomms to bo nssarod s that Amerloun | it ) foy (o rusuing editor of (o Nio- | Ono of the maive confessions of a comments of the democratic press, book buyers will have to pay move for which hus been reveling in the gleoful | pap knowlodge who huve not the neces- | upon an intellectusl equality with man | whether they were suffeving a like de ; p AbtEin fos tho Biscounty [ vOlhg (orman frau was loling hoer feten antivipation that Brazil would reject | gary quilitications. Many who o into Allhlllu'l't'lv.\ swept un.:.\ thoolat{lusion | (nadanco.t e rEcia rathar stavtlng| S inoediprloo. oftllteintura will ibal| ERAACRIRT SEL SRR FaRLueRIaoar b |0 R i el cas the treaty and thus give American for- | {1 office do 50 with u view to remaining | which made woman naturally dependent ¢ sonsitivimnerves, mainly abiorhed by fho: publishors aud . 1 wing moro favmiors n Kuox | T not, kuow,” she sald simply o broken eign trade a black eye. Ttwillbe pleas- | joug enough to obtain a general | on the stronger sex. 1t hus also opened | Massachusetta-has the best muchinery | PO Dle MWy Lamigolng to s | Rngiah, Lhawilaguss gocd wai, 380 pHay antfor Mr. Blainoto know that there | knowledge of the patent laws, having | many new avenues for selt-support | for gathering stitistics of any statein | COLONEL RobEme [y L ad- [ about oue of randest countios in No- Phe candor of her speoch was the are some democrats who put patriotismi | dono which theyentor practice us patent | and~ thus mude it loss necessary | the union and the investigation of the | dressed Brasica aud 1ters suit my idoas bot- | 10 Bor suceess getting a husvand above partisanship. attorneys. Very little safoguard is pro- | for women to marry, Self-analysis has | subject has boen much more thorough | duysago, and took oceasion to criticise | favmers aind fower poiiticis. "1 reane foug A PEW NOLILOGUY, vided for tho inventor against profes- | given the modern woman new views gf | than elsewhere. The result is that it | the burlosque and clownish tendencies | conity propled. | predict for Knox connty L o MAN'S inhumanity to man finds its | sinal incapacity or doceit, Any person | men and of herself. IUhias led hev to see | hus been learnod that in the last fow | of the curront drama. — Ho appoalod to | S eI st eob Yewrs iwits bistory, Vou § (o S Vi Hot 0 counterpart in womun's inhuwanity to | of “good moral character” may practive | that man wants marviage, not a particu- | years 1461 farms have been whsolutely | dvamatists snd 1o players o consider | bout it a1 it o by o e Lhall bolieve ! lovo her, iid woman, ‘T'wenty y ago Miss Anna | before the patent office. He need not be | lar woman; while she wants “the special | abandoned, or a total of 126,500 acres. | their profession with something like - Does she love me! Ab, who can tell Dickinson was a leader in the woman’s | a member of the bar, or have any legal | man,” Hence, Mrs, Wells .-4-u«-hn1~-\“ More than half of these farms have |reverence,and to study to give dignity 't Help stealing, This maiden’s favored lover rights ugitation. With a well stored | knowledge beyond what is necessary to | that matrimony no longer occuples its | buildings upon them, which ave loft to | and eredit to the porformances on the | NOFh Adaws has a kleptomaninc, s woman | My fortune's slim mind and foreeful roasoning powers, she | properly present and prosecute an uppli | old place in the minds of women. tod gave tho surage movement a habi- | cation. Mr Benjamin says that what is | Mrs, Sherwood, in her rejoinder, | prope thus abandoned is | astic devotoe of the t viand his [ BIONNR I 6 giooory ataro and was arrastod 8 in tho swim—with rippling ¢ tation and an honorable name. Over- | needed for the proper administation of | voices the old robust views of matris | 81,076,525, fden of it Is that It is a place for Hhow Ber oo ok msarheds A 1o work and extremo poverty wrecked both | the patent ofice is the best obtainablo [ mony and strongly asserts that thoy | The most surprising partof this unes- | teuthful dopiction of human nat e RO SRR RSy S mind and body, but hor great misfor- | scientific and logal talent and plentyof it, | are = still hold by the majority of | pected revelution of the decadence of | thinks the play should give anopportu- | ools and orockery. . Sh tune isnot lightoned by the practical | sulicientiy and reasonably paid and in- | women, She says that mareiage | Massuchusetts sympathy or charity of her sex. It was | telligently :d. Other roquire- | is still the ideal relation of life | ubandored farms are located principally | human nature, such s pathos, humor left for o poor board of a Pennsylvania | ments form and stable decisions | and that none of the changes which | in the richest portions of the st town to provide her a home at public | and uniform practice, permanence in @ come over social conditions have | which ure the central and western s fon will ugree in this, as it has done expense, office, and attorneys subject to proy aflected it in theleast, “The sud reason | tions, The most prosperous farmersin from the profitable hurean of the goverument has | paths open 1o her in theso days and ac- | and deeds of the thirteen representativos |40 Progress. It isuot at all prohubl great deal of room forimprovement. | The chief fault is in tho appointment of | ness of their sex to excrcise its natural | ago the Massnchusetts authoritios hogan officials to perform dutios requiving ex- | bent. Higher education has put them | a cavoful investigation to aseertai b brara Pione Y srmine hued cir- | ChAFACter was made on o steeet car the othe e their books, and that the benefits of the | eular notifvink f Knox county | UAY, says the Detroit Freo Press. A pretiy an assembinge of wetors a fow this much I know. ) The sessed valuation of wee, Colonel Ingorsoll is an enthusi ladyltke demonnor who siaals, ‘Bho wa AR ORI INY AL M lp iler rich gown sweeps the aislo &l 4 Which shall it ot Boss stays away; dleulture is the ) or exhibiting all the emotions of | 14 whatstores the gonds weeo taken frow feulture is thut tho | pity for exhibiting all the emotions of | Gt Whal stores the gosds wore takun t i cducated and nicely apneating. Sh The thought now rs—hor mothow's it . | passion, affection, Al b opins | twenty-tive vears' old. Mes. Dayi b 10W SPTIORS her Wother's e school 1n Wales aud shows racomm Ul hasto me 1o he door he matter is u surorise tohor & + Belle's sweeping brings too steep a b very beginning of the | was held for furtherexamination But Bess—sho sweops the tloor! \ beattion, she! Ah, no, Isay; Ol Nick will nover seizo hor |